;. 















Book 



PRESENTED BY 






. i 




William Bucknell. 

Trustee, 1846-1863 and 1882-1890. Chairman, 1882-1$ 



MEMORIALS 



OF 



Bucknell University 



1 846- 1 896 



LEWISBURG, PA. 



PUBLISHED BY THE UNIVERSITY 

1896 









PRESS OF 

FRANKLIN PRINTING COMPANY 

516-518 Minor Street 

philadelphia 




John Price Crozer. 

Trustee. 1847-1866. Founder of the Chair of Rhetori 




HE BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY was chartered by an Act of 
the Pennsylvania Legislature, approved by Governor Francis 
R. Shunk, on the fifth day of February, 1846. In this 
volume of " Memorials " there is contained, besides the Commemoration 
Address by President Harris, a brief statement without comment of the 
events, year by year, during" the fifty years of its legal existence. The 
names of all the trustees, curators, presidents, professors, alumni, and 
matriculates of the College are given, as well as of the principals of the Insti- 
tute and Academy, and of the teachers who have served two years or more, 
and of the graduates of the Institute and School of Music. The names of 
the officers and students for 1895-96 are included. Specially instructive 
will be the " Comparison of the courses at different dates." The volume 
contains seventeen portraits of persons prominent in service for the institu- 
tion during its first quarter century. The list might easily have been larger. 



Commemoration Bboress. 



Delivered June 21, 1896. 



By JOHN H. HARRIS, LL. D., 

President of Bucknell University. 

The real source of a river is to be sought, not in some Itasca lake, but 
in ten thousand springs from ten thousand hillsides, whence is gathered 
through myriad affluents the great current that bears on its bosom the 
commerce of States and nations. So in tracing the history of such an insti- 
tution as this, we cannot say that in the thought or purpose of this one or 
of that, it was born, nor in this nor in that place. All the drops coming 
from the clouds, gathered from whencesoever they may, form the river, so 
wherever the fundamental ideas and motives of Christian liberal education 
are found, there is found the origin of this institution. Nor can any one 
say whether this person had more or that one less in the founding of it. 
Whose gift was largest, a glance at the treasurer's books will disclose ; 
whose sacrifice was the greatest, whose service most consecrated is not to 
be thus discovered ; whose was the effectual prayer which availed is known 
only to Him who answered it. We will, therefore, not concern ourselves 
to-day with details of deeds or eulogies of persons. Outward deeds are but 
the husks of history ; history itself consists in ideas and spiritual potencies. 

History is consequently concerned only with man and with human 
institutions. Man alone in this world is a free cause. He alone forecasts 
the years and builds intelligently for the future. He alone acts according 
to ideas, and his institutions are the embodiment of his ideas. A history 
of an institution will consequently be an exposition of the fundamental 
conceptions embodied in it, and will set forth in what way and to what 

9 



io Memorials of Bucknell University. 

extent the ideas have been realized, and in the light of these ideas will 
forecast the future. For all history is prophecy and is valuable chiefly for 
that reason. 

I. There are, as I can conceive, embodied in this Bucknell University, 
the fiftieth year of whose legal existence we celebrate, three fundamental 
conceptions. 

I. This school is consecrated to liberal education. It regards man as 
formed for freedom and educates him into freedom. Man is not the slave 
of nature, but is born for dominion over nature. He is not even the serv- 
ant of nature, but is the servant of God alone. He is consequently not to 
be used as a means, as an instrument, nor to be treated as a thing. He is 
of more worth than the world of things. This regard for the worth of man, 
irrespective of race, nationality, sex or condition — a regard which lies at 
the basis of liberal education — is of Christian origin. If we would find its 
source, we must traverse the ages back to Bethlehem. We will have to 
listen to the words of John, fittingly called the Divine. The Word — who 
was with God and was God — became flesh and dwelt among us. In this 
fact is the germ of all education of man as man. It stamps man as of 
unmeasured worth. The man is not merely more than nature, he is also 
more than institutions. We do not educate for the State as an end, nor for 
the Church. We would not morally or mentally emasculate the man that 
the Church might be served, or even saved. The Church is for man, not 
man for the Church. The man is also more than his class or his vocation. 
As promoters of liberal education, we do not inquire what the man's posi- 
tion is or is to be. Liberal education is distinguished from caste education. 
The Hindoos educate for the caste. Each man's place is determined by 
his birth. His education, his morality, his vocation are thereby pre-deter- 
mined. The treasures of thought are not common property, but are the 
possession of the higher caste alone. If a member of the lowest caste 
-should hear the Vedas read, he must have molten lead poured into his ears. 
Caste education has its spring in the requirement that each one shall perfect 
himself in the labor allotted to him. An attempt is made in our day to 
establish caste education in the West. Herbert Spencer lends the weight 
of his name and the persuasiveness of his eloquence to diffusing the idea. 
Many advocate it without having penetrated the meaning of the movement. 
Prepare a man from his birth for his future calling is the cry. But to do 
so, the man's calling must be chosen for him. On the other hand, Christian 
education, regarding the man as more than his calling, breaks down caste 



Memorials of Bucknell University. i i 

by annihilating its principle. Educate the man. Develop his powers. 
Enlarge his personality. Later he may choose his vocation and train him- 
self for it, and he will be all the better minister, or lawyer, or mechanic, 
or farmer for having been first developed as a man. How much would 
have been lost to America if the caste system of education had prevailed, 
and Franklin and Hamilton and Lincoln and Moody had followed the 
calling into which they were born. 

But while Christian education favors and regards as indispensable the 
training of the mind into insight into principles and power of independent 
thought, it lays chief stress on the moral and religious element. The 
former element is a sword only, keen and tempered ; but it is no less im- 
portant that the sword be rightly used than that it be well tempered and 
keen. Character is of more importance than knowledge and must be made 
first in education. The great Lawgiver as He sat on Mount Hattin declared 
that in the kingdom which is to rule the earth character is first. He pro- 
nounced as of that kingdom and, therefore, blessed, those who are meek, 
merciful, and pure. In so doing He not only re-enacted the law given on 
Sinai, but revealed a still older code, one built into the constitution of the 
human soul as it came from the hand of God in whose image it was 
created; and, hence, the law of the creation and of Sinai and of Hattin is 
as old and enduring as God Himself. But Christ not only taught the law 
and lived it, but was it. Hence, Christian education has a definition of 
character in the character of Christ, whom it sets forth as the ideal of man- 
hood into which the man is to be transformed. To the idea that character 
is more than skill, philosophy also is coming. The social mechanism, says 
Herbert Spencer, rests almost wholly upon character. The world of worths, 
according to Lotze, is the key to the world of forms. In other words, the 
foundation of the universe is laid in righteousness, and character is its goal. 
Now it is for character that a Christian college exists. To be sure, there 
must be training of the intellect, and in resources for attaining this end the 
Christian college should stand in the first rank. That a college exists for 
character is no excuse for poor buildings, scant libraries, insufficient appa- 
ratus, meagre courses, and obsolete methods. For such a high result these 
should be of the best. For in saying that character is highest we do not 
imply that intellectual insight is low. If we can have but one we will choose 
character. But they are not incompatible. We can have both, and the 
Christian college should keep both steadily in view. Technical or special 
skill, however, belongs to the professional or technical school, and for that 



12 Memorials of Bucknell University. 

the technical school exists. The college training precedes technical train- 
ing both in time and importance. 

2. The Christian education does not make the perfection of the individual 
its sole aim. It trains men for service. It is essentially missionary, apos- 
tolic. When Jesus after the night of prayer called to Him the twelve, He 
named them apostles. Thus He broke with Judaism both in organization 
and in spirit, and began the distinctively Christian dispensation, and with it 
everything fundamentally Christian, including Christian education. The 
Jewish spirit was exclusive, the Christian missionary. The Greek valued, 
not individuals, but the individual, the wealthy, the well-born. For all 
others, the defective, the poor, the slave, the artisan, the trader, the woman, 
there was no place in the Greek idea of education. The Christian spirit, on 
the other hand, is missionary. Go ye into all the world, and go teaching all 
nations. The Christian education is thus essentially apostolic. Each col- 
lege is a missionary centre. It is conducted as a benevolence. Its build- 
ings are erected by gifts from generous Christian givers. It needs endow- 
ments and receives them from the same source. Its professors are often its 
sole endowment. In the early history of Washington College men of such 
moral and intellectual eminence that they could educate and hold the life- 
long respect of such men as Blaine and Bristow, served at a salary of four 
hundred dollars a year. The same spirit prevailed at Providence, at New 
Haven, at Hamilton, at Lewisburg. The missionary spirit of the professors 
pervaded the whole school. Men became heroic in the presence of self-devo- 
tion. This is a chief reason why the men of the earlier days were so deeply 
imbued with the missionary spirit. Hence, they went out and stimulated 
others to seek liberal culture. Thus the whole region round about became 
fructified. Each college created its own environment. It was not a question 
whether this institution or some other should educate those who came here. 
If this institution had not been founded three-fourths of those who have been 
educated here would have received no liberal education whatever. All the 
power which has gone forth from this centre for the uplifting of society, 
for the healing of the nations, would have been wanting to the world. 

3. A liberal education is called Christian, not only because of the 
value it puts upon human worth and because of its missionary character, 
but also because of the principle and goal of its activity. Christian edu- 
cation finds its principle and goal in Christ. It recognizes the need of more 
than science and philosophy for the perfecting of character. It takes its 
watchword from the discourse with Nicodemus. While the work of the 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 13 

Christian college is education, its starting point is regeneration. After this 
it aims to form the man according to the type of Christ. This type, how- 
ever, is broad enough and high enough and deep enough to include every 
excellence possible to man. No doubt a chief purpose of liberal education, 
from the intellectual point of view, is training the mind for insight into prin- 
ciples and thus laying the foundation for further progress. Only thus can 
the mind realize its freedom, and gain over nature and self the mastery for 
which it is designed. But to rational inquiry in every sphere of thought 
Christian education would be the last to interpose a barrier. Ecclesiastical 
authority has too often said, Thus far, no farther, but a hierarchy is not the 
Church, and ecclesiasticism is not Christianity. Nowhere should the funda- 
mental questions of philosophy and life be discussed with more freedom 
than in the Christian school. There, if anywhere, should all questions be 
reverently thought through to the finish. No thinking will go beyond God. 
No true thinking will turn aside from God, nor will fundamental thinking 
stop short of Him. But the purpose of Christian education is not deep 
thinking and high imagining alone, but it is also and chiefly moral worth. 
Moral worth for the Christian finds its definition and example in Christ. 
The Christian education, therefore, makes its goal the transformation of the 
renewed man into the image of Christ. It includes the just and harmonious 
development of the whole of man's complex nature. That nature each 
man, according to the Christian idea, has received as a trust to be developed 
according to the will of the Giver. According to the same idea, the 
Christian school, its Trustees and Faculty, receive the youth, each of them 
of immeasurable worth and with an immortal destiny, as a solemn trust, the 
most solemn that man can take upon himself, to lead them into all fullness 
and completeness and pureness of manhood in the Son of man. In accom- 
plishing this high task, the Christian education must look to a Power above 
itself. Education takes a second place in the work of human development. 
It does not claim for itself the first. The first place is given to the gospel 
of regeneration. This is the power of God and the wisdom of God, which 
is higher than the power of man and the wisdom of man. This beginning 
in the man of a life from above is indispensable to the right development of 
man, not only ethically, but also intellectually. Until the keystone is placed 
the whole arch must rest on frail timbers. Not in vain was it said, Blessed 
are the pure in heart for they shall see God. Not only is purity of heart 
necessary to seeing God, but also to discerning God's ways ; to the 
knowledge of self and of the world. So it stands true for the stars above 



14 Memorials of Bucknell University. 

and for the earth beneath, for the movements of nations and the unresting 
soul of man, for the world which God has made and for God who made the 
world that it is the Spirit sent forth from Him, that guides in all the truth. 

II. The most complete realization of the foundation ideas of an insti- 
tution must still be imperfect. Yet, as I meditate upon those ideas, I can- 
not but feel that the exposition of them is an exhibition of the life of this 
institution. From the beginning it has stood for liberal education. It has 
been conducted as a benevolent, missionary enterprise. Men have been 
educated here to work for others. It has found the principle and inspira- 
tion of its life in Christ. In the founding of such an institution, there are 
two principal factors to be considered, to which may be added the outwork- 
ing of the institution upon the world. 

i. The external factor includes all those agencies which work upon the 
institution from without. Primary among these is the religious denomina- 
tion with which it is connected, and which is responsible for its character 
and growth. The religious denominations in America have been pioneers 
in education, especially in the higher education. The Baptists, in the early 
history of the country, were few in number. In 1784 there were only 471 
churches and 35,000 members in the United States. The first Baptist 
church in Pennsylvania was organized in 1684. The Baptists of the Phila- 
delphia Association opened an academy in 1756, at Hopewell, New Jersey. 
Rev. Morgan Edwards, pastor of the first Baptist church, Philadelphia, 
projected a college, which was finally located at Providence, Rhode Island, 
and is now Brown University. In its charter is this noteworthy provision 
which has formed the keynote in all Baptist institutions : " Into this liberal 
and catholic institution shall never be admitted any religious tests. But on 
the contrary, all members hereof shall forever enjoy full, free, absolute, and 
uninterrupted liberty of conscience. Sectarian differences shall not make 
any part of the public and classical instruction." This was in 1764. In 
18 18, Dr. William Staughton and Professor Iran Chase organized a 
theological class in Philadelphia. This was removed to Washington city, 
and in 1821 appeared as Columbian University. In 1832, the Northumber- 
land Baptist Association proposed a " Manual Labor Academy," which 
was waived in favor of the institution at Haddington. When this failed, 
the Northumberland Association, in 1845, renewed the effort, and began 
the enterprise which has resulted in the Bucknell University. 

The Bucknell University, though coming later than the Madison and 
Columbian Universities, is a result of the same intellectual and moral up- 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 15 

rising which characterizes this century, and which has shown itself in the 
Home and Foreign missionary movement, in the development of Sunday- 
schools, and, later, of the Young Men's Christian Association and young 
peoples societies within the Church ; in the temperance reform ; in the interest 
in the slave ; in the establishment of systems for the education of all the 
people by the State. This movement, which is transforming the world, has 
a distinctively religious basis. The colleges for the Christian education of 
the young rest upon the same foundation. There was a widespread feeling 
among the Baptists of Pennsylvania and New Jersey that they should do 
their part in this work. If it was regarded as a burden, they should not 
shrink from bearing their part ; if it was a privilege, they should claim a 
portion ; if it was a means of influence, they should have their share. 
The Baptists of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware formed the po- 
tential basis of the institution. That the potential was changed into the 
actual was due largely to Rev. William Shadrach. He had been pastor in 
Pittsburg, and was, in 1847, pastor in Philadelphia. He had the confidence 
as few other men of the denomination throughout the State. Rev. 
Eugenio Kincaid and he traversed the State, visiting nearly all the churches 
and the homes of many of the people. Four thousand four hundred and 
eighty-four different persons subscribed to the first $100,000. The work 
done by Doctor Shadrach and Doctor Kincaid has been of incalculable 
value to the institution. The bonds between the school and the hearts of 
the people of the two commonwealths forged by these men have never been 
broken. This is the real foundation of the institution, broad, deep, and en- 
during. This has given it prosperity and power, this guarantees its per- 
petuity. The vital connection between the college and the homes of the 
commonwealths has been maintained. Young men and young women have 
come from these homes, and have brought with them the hearts of the 
parents ; they have returned, and have carried Bucknell back with them in 
their hearts ; they have founded homes of their own, and have made the 
name of their Alma Mater familiar within its walls as a household word. 
Thus a school creates its own environment. Thus its constituency enlarges 
with the years, the interest broadens, and thus, grounded in the hearts of its 
denominational constituency, and in the hearts of its sons and daughters, it 
attains to an almost indestructible life. 

Nor is it a matter of small consequence to the school that the people of 
the neighborhood are friendly. The people of Lewisburg contributed over 
$12,000 toward the first $100,000 for endowment. Soon after one hundred 



1 6 Memorials of Bucknell University. 

and fifty-five of them (so general was the interest), contributed $14,340 to the 
building fund of $30,000. In every subsequent effort they have borne 
their part. It is of consequence, both to the town and the school, that this 
good feeling continue. The prosperity of the one is the prosperity of the 
other. This is true, not only in the material, but also in the spiritual. There 
is a constant inter-action between the school and the town, which, if the 
influence be of the right kind, cannot but prove beneficial to all. 

The Board of Trustees is the more immediate organ of the denomi- 
nation and of the public in the administration of the University. The 
Trustees have the management of the funds, and care of the property; they 
appoint and remove members of the faculty; in them is vested the function 
of legislation. Upon them depends, therefore, in great measure the welfare 
of the institution. It is cause for thankfulness that in the boards of our 
University have sat men of unquestioned integrity, of commanding ability, 
such as to draw to the institution the confidence of the public. Nearly 
every man of financial strength in the denomination in the two States has 
been connected with the Bucknell University as contributor or trustee. 

2. The Board of Trustees forms the connecting link between the ex- 
ternal and internal factors. While the external factors make the school, the 
teachers and students are the school. It is no unimportant fact for the 
Bucknell University that so large a proportion of its students come from 
Christian homes. The present year fifty- eight came from the homes of 
Christian ministers. Young people coming from the atmosphere of the 
Christian home, of the Sunday-school and the Church, have a consecration 
and a conscientiousness not found in others less favorably nurtured. Most 
of the students are, or become while here, professing Christians. These 
young men, for whatever vocation preparing, give tone and character to the 
whole school. They maintain prayer-meetings, they support the Young 
Men's Christian Associations, they become pupils and teachers in the Sun- 
day-schools, they engage in various kinds of religious work in the neigh- 
boring towns, they labor personally with fellow-students. This is the 
history in brief of the school from the foundation. It is a record of con- 
tinuous work, year in year out, for fifty years. As a consequence the great 
majority of those who have come here without a personal faith in Christ 
have been led to accept Him as Saviour and Lord. The present year fully 
nine-tenths of the students are professing Christians. 

This evangelistic spirit and work reinforces powerfully the intellectual 
life of the students. To this it is due, in great part, that the students of 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 17 

Bucknell University have been distinguished for hard work. When a man 
puts his conscience into his work, especially when he regards life as a 
Divine vocation, he will not do his work with eye service as a pleaser of 
men, but with singleness of heart, as unto God. Another capital reason 
for this spirit of work is, that most of our students are from families of 
moderate means. Their future is not made for them ; they must make it 
for themselves. Such men are the coming leaders of the world. To 
induce such men to enter its classes, our oldest American university 
expends annually $75,000 to $80,000. Since it has adopted that policy its 
graduates are again taking the lead in every vocation. Our attendance is 
composed almost wholly of such men. Consequently the faithful, hard- 
working student at Bucknell is not regarded as an oddity, as is the case in 
some colleges, but work here has always been regarded as honorable and 
the worker has not been despised. This is as true to-day of Bucknell as it 
has ever been. An examination of the records shows that the percentage 
of hard-working students is as great as at any time in the history of 
the institution. The introduction of electives has also quickened the 
mental life of the institution, and broadens greatly the student's conception 
of the field of knowledge. I dwell thus upon the character of the students 
who come here, and the spirit which prevails because of their supreme 
importance as educational factors. The students educate and form one 
another. The other chief element in the life of the school is the men who 
teach. Education is not the acquisition of knowledge. Teaching is not 
the professor's chief function. He ought to be an educator, and education 
is dynamical. The professor educates by what he is ; by what he is as a 
student and scholar, still more by what he is as a man. His mental force, 
his power of will, his self-command, his social tact, above all his warm sym- 
pathy, are much more potential in education, and much more valuable than 
learning and intellectual acumen. It is in the character of the professors 
that the Christian school should be pre-eminent. It is a mooted question 
what part of the curriculum should be given to religious instruction. 
What place shall the Bible have ? Many think that if there could be 
daily recitations in the Bible, in all the classes, that the school would be 
pre-eminently Christian. I do not disparage Bible-study in the college ; 
on the contrary, I favor it. Yet you might have the Bible given as promi- 
nent a place as the most ardent advocate of such teaching would ask, and 
the school be atheistic. The only place in the Christian school that the 
Christian religion can have, so that Christ will be first and last and all, is in 
2 



1 8 Memorials of Bucknell University. 

the heart of every teacher and student. Then every subject studied and 
taught will be Christian. When Professor Bliss teaches Demosthenes and 
Plato, it is Christian oratory and philosophy that is taught, because of 
the manifestation of Christ in every word, tone, and act of the teacher. 
When Professor Grier teaches Latin, it becomes Christian Latin ; when 
Professor Tustin teaches Science, it becomes Christian Science ; when 
Professors Smith and Lowry teach Literature, it becomes Christian 
Literature ; when Professors Taylor and James teach Mathematics, it 
becomes Christian Mathematics ; when Presidents Malcom and Loomis 
teach Philosophy, it becomes Christian Philosophy. Of course, in empha- 
sizing character, we do not undervalue scholarship ; we must have both. 
And when we speak of character, we do not mean innocence or harmless- 
ness. The last place for a merely harmless man is in the college. The 
college needs the man of positive righteousness — robust in faith, energetic in 
action, stimulating in thought. Such men in our schools of learning 
become of priceless value to the students, and through them to the world. 
3. For we are not to conceive of the Bucknell University as limited to 
this town. The school must have its centre somewhere, and in the course 
of events this school is centred here. But it is not thus limited in its scope. 
Each man who goes out from its halls becomes a centre of influence — 
becomes himself a teacher. So we may regard the Faculty of Bucknell 
University as encircling the world. There is no vision so keen that it could 
from any coign of vantage, however high, perceive the whole of the work 
this University is now doing. Look to the east and north, through New 
Jersey to Maine ; look southward, through Virginia and the Carolinas to 
Florida; survey Tennessee and the Gulf States; glance over the great 
North-central States, from Kentucky to Michigan ; traverse the great plains 
and plateaus of the West to California and Alaska; look northward through 
the British Provinces, southward through Cuba and Mexico, and the 
Republics of Central and South America, and there is no State, no Territory, 
no province, scarcely a republic, in which during these fifty years an impulse 
from this institution has not been felt through the presence of some one of 
her sons or daughters. If this were all, it would be much. But you may 
spread out the globe like a map and note its islands and empires ; look at 
its Japan, and China, and Central and Farther India, and Australia and 
Africa, and the islands of the sea, and not one of these is stranger to the 
influence which has gone out from this institution ! Her line has gone out 
through all the earth, and her words to the end of the world. Or, looked 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 19 

at from another point of view, her voice has been heard through her sons 
in both houses of Congress, in the legislatures of many of the States, on 
the judges' bench, in the pulpit, at the bar, by the bedside of the sick, in 
a thousand homes, cheering, comforting, helping, pointing the way of life. 
This is but the beginning. Only fifty years. This is but a span in the life 
of a college. Princeton this year celebrates its one hundred and fiftieth 
anniversary, and is only a child yet ; Harvard but recently commemorated 
her quarter of a thousand years ; but Oxford, which still flourishes in 
perennial youth, has on her campus ten centuries chronicled in stone. In 
building upon the foundation laid here we are not building for a decade or 
a century, but for a thousand years. Surely, in view of results so far- 
reaching, of potencies so mighty, of outgoings so beneficent, we may well 
say that no privilege can be accorded to man greater than the privilege of 
having part in founding and carrying forward such an institution as this. 

III. The perpetuity of an institution depends upon its fundamental ideas 
and its faithfulness to them. If the ideas for which it stands are of high 
and perpetual significance, and it is faithful to them, it will endure. Educa- 
tion will be a chief concern of man as long as the race continues. The 
child comes into the world ignorant and unformed, and must be instructed 
and formed. Capacity for education, general and special, is transmissible. 
The race will become more and more educable, but will never get beyond 
the need of education. The State is doing more, year by year, for education. 
This it does for three reasons ; the political, because the intelligent are the 
best citizens ; the industrial, because the ignorant artisan cannot compete in 
the world's market with the educated; the military, because bayonets which 
think will prevail. Sadowa and Sedan convinced Europe that an illiterate 
soldiery cannot face in the field an intelligent soldiery. So France, Italy, 
and England, adopted in 1870 systems of national education. But these 
reasons do not give liberal education. Liberal education is education into 
inner freedom (to which the outer must in the end conform), and there can 
be no education into freedom with the professor's chair chained to the throne 
of the king or of the caucus. Nor do such reasons lead to universal educa- 
tion ; they do not apply to women. Much less do they lead to Christian 
education. It was not by accident but of inner necessity, not exceptional 
but universal, that Herod could not tell where the Christ should be born. 
It is not the function of the State to answer that question. Yet man's 
religious nature is the highest in him. For the State, also, religion is more 
important than supremacy in wealth or arms. The State reposes upon the 



20 Memorials of Bucknell University. 

ethical, and the ethical rests upon the religious. The conservation and 
strengthening of the ultimate foundation depends upon the Church and the 
Christian school. As a matter of fact, ethics is either not taught at all in 
the State colleges, or is treated historically, or is taught as pagan — Christian 
ethics has no place in them. There will remain this great field for the 
Christian school to cultivate. If the school fills the place with fidelity, it 
will endure. Money will be forthcoming for its endowment ; friends will 
arise for its support. Those whom the institution has formed will in turn 
be the supporters and formers of the institution. They will take their place 
with others in the boards of trustees and in the faculties of instruction, and 
they will influence its life through a thousand channels. There is more 
danger that an institution may not continue sufficiently plastic and adapt 
itself to the changing conditions of society and knowledge, than that it will 
depart from its fundamental conceptions. 

We may expect then that our Bucknell University — the fruit of so much 
sacrifice, hallowed by so many prayers, the child of so great faith, the mother 
of so many loyal sons and loving daughters — will continue in its beneficent 
course through the coming ages, faithful to its great mission, the develop- 
ment of Christian manhood ; never forgetful of Him who is the source of 
spiritual life, the type of morality, the goal of ethics, the risen and reigning 
Son of God. 





David Jayne, M. D., LL. D. 

Trustee, 18^1-1866. 



Ennals of Bucfcnell "{University. 



1845. The Northumberland Association appointed a committee con- 
sisting of William H. Ludwig, M. D., Rev. Charles Tucker, Rev. J. E. 
Bradley, Rev. J. G. Miles, and James Moore, Sr., which reported, August 
14th, that " A high school for males, another for females, a college, and also 
a Theological Institute " should be established in Central Pennsylvania. 
On December 27th Prof. Stephen W. Taylor accepted the position of 
General Agent. 

1846. The charter of the University at Lewisburg was signed on Feb- 
ruary 5th by the Governor of Pennsylvania. Stephen W. Taylor was 
elected Principal of the school. 

October 5th. The school was opened in the basement of the Baptist 
Church. 

1847. College classes are organized. 

December 4th. " Calliopean Literary Society " organized. College 
prayer-meeting established by Messrs J. N. Folwell, T. C. Trotter, and 
A. J. Hay. 

1848. The Academy building completed at a cost of $8,000. 

1849. The $100,000, required by the charter, secured. Lewisburg 
paid in $12,131. New Jersey, for a professorship, $10,720. The principal 
subscribers to this fund were: David Jayne & Sons, $12,500 ; John P. 
Crozer, $7,500; William Bucknell, $5,000; Thomas Wattson, $2,000; 
James Moore, Sr., $1,500, and John C. Davis, Martin Bell, Washington 
Butcher, W. W. Keen, Rev. Samuel J. Cresswell, Adam Johnston, Israel E. 
James, William H. Ludwig, Samuel Wolfe, James Moore, Jr., Levi B. Christ. 
Joseph Meixell, Benjamin Bear, each $1,000. 

The labor of raising this sum was performed chiefly by Rev. William 
Shadrach, and Rev. Eugenio Kincaid. 

Rev. George R. Bliss, A. M., was elected Professor of Greek, Rev. 

2 3 



24 Memorials of Bucknell University. 

George W. Anderson, A. M., Professor of Latin, and Isaac N. Loomis, 
A. M., Principal of the Academy. 

1850. The west wing of the college completed. Cost, $12,000. 

1850-51. On motion of Hon. James Buchanan, LL.D. (afterward 
President of the United States), degrees were conferred upon the first class 
presented for graduation, seven in number. Dr. Taylor resigned to accept 
the presidency of Madison University. Howard Malcom, D. D., LL. D., 
succeeded him, and became the first president of the University. Charles S. 
James, A. M., was elected Professor of Mathematics, and Alfred Taylor, 
A. M., Professor of Belles-lettres. A three years' course in Science was 
established, leading to the degree of Sc. B. The Theta Alpha and Euepia 
Literary Societies were established. 

Attendance — College, 61 ; Academy, 117; Female Institute, 48, Total, 
226. 

1851-52. Howard Malcom, D.D., LL.D., President. Forty-five 
thousand dollars raised for buildings. Harvey D. Walker, A. M., Principal 
of the Academy. Ladies' Institute moved into the building corner Second 
and St. Louis Streets. Miss Hadassah E. Scribner, Principal. 

Attendance — College, 64; Academy, 57; Female Institute, 18. Total, 

139- 

1852-53. Alfred Taylor, A. M., Professor of Belles-lettres, re- 
signed. 

Attendance — College, 83 ; Academy, 80; Female Institute, 48. Total, 
211. 

1853-54. Rev. George W. Anderson, A. M., Professor of Latin, re- 
signed. Rev. Justin R. Loomis, Ph. D., elected Professor of Science. Miss 
Amanda Taylor, Principal of the Institute. 

Attendance — College, 80; Academy, 66; Female Institute, 61. Total, 

187. 

1854-55. Theological Department established; Rev. Thomas F. 
Curtis, A. M., Professor. First class, two in number, graduated from 
the Institute. 

Attendance — College, 70; Academy, 63; Female Institute, 50. Total 

183. 

1855-56. The Northern Central Railroad in operation to Montandon. 
Attendance — Theological, 1 1 ; College, 73 ; Academy, 5 1 ; Female 
Institute, 65. Total, 189. 

1856-57. Dr. Malcom resigns; Rev. J. R. Loomis, Ph. D., elected 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 25 

President. George Yeager, A. M., Principal of the Academy. Female 
Institute moves into the present main building. 

Attendance — Theological, 14; College, 51; Academy, 71; Female 
Institute, 70. Total, 206. 

1857-58. Thirty thousand dollars raised for buildings. Algebra 
through simple equations added to the requirements for admission. 

Attendance — Theological, 15; College, 49; Academy, 62; Institute, 
82. Total, 208. 

1858-59. Main building and east wing of College completed — Francis 
W. Tustin, A. M., Professor of Science; Rev. I. C. Wynn, A. M., Principal 
of the Academy. 

Attendance — Theological, 10; College, 55 ; Academy, 64; Institute, 82. 
Total, 211. 

1859-60. Attendance — Theological, 12 ; College, 55 ; Academy, 61 ; 
Institute, 79. Total, 207. Average in College for the decade, 64. 

1860-61. Attendance — Theological, 10; College, 58; Academy, 61 ; 
Institute, 82. Total, 211. 

1861-62. Attendance — Theological, 5; College, 53; Academy, 54; 
Institute, 73. Total, 185. 

1862-63. June 16th, Co. A, Pennsylvania Militia, organized, number- 
ing 59 students; Thomas R.Jones, captain. Discharged July 27th. 

Attendance — Theological, 8; College, 35 ; Academy, 40 ; Institute, 59. 
Total, 142. 

1863-64. Lucy W. Rundell, Principal of the Institute. 

Attendance — Theological, 9 ; College, 42 ; Academy, 70 ; Institute, 1 19. 
Total, 240. 

1864-65. One hundred thousand dollars for endowment raised by 
President Loomis. The principal subscribers to this fund were: John P. 
Crozer, $20,000 ; E. A. Coray, Horatio Mulford, Thomas Wattson, John C. 
Davis, J. P. Levy, J. G. Neafie, and Jacob Reese, each $5,000. 

Crozer Chair of Rhetoric and Literature founded. Professor Thomas 
F. Curtis, D D., resigned. 

Attendance — Theological, 9; College, 6^; Academy, 120; Institute, 
185. Total, 377. 

1865-66. Rev. Lemuel Moss, A. M., Professor of Theology; Rev. 
Lucius E. Smith, A. M., Crozer Professor of Rhetoric ; Rev. James Waters, 
A. M., Principal of the Academy. First Doctorate of Divinity conferred 
upon an alumnus, John Harvard Castle, A. M. 



26 Memorials of Bucknell University. 

Attendance — Theological, 13 ; College, 86 ; Academy , 1 69 ; Institute, 
183. Total, 451. 

1866-67. Silas H. La Rue, A. M., Principal of the Academy. 

Attendance — Theological, 15; College, 82 ; Academy, 172; Institute, 
142. Total, 411. 

1867-68. Theological department discontinued in favor of Crozer 
Seminary. Number of graduates, 37 ; attendance, total in thirteen years, 
139. Professors Lucius E. Smith and Lemuel Moss resign. 

Attendance — Theological, 8; College, 60; Academy, 159; Institute, 
132. Total, 359. 

1868-69. Freeman Loomis, A. M., Principal of the Academy. Chair 
of Rhetoric vacant. The Lewisburg Railroad in operation to Lewis- 
burg. 

Attendance — College, 70; Academy, 119; Institute, 102. Total, 291. 

1869-70. Rev. Robert Lowry, A. M., Crozer Professor of Rhetoric. 
The Academy was divided into the Classical Preparatory with Freeman 
Loomis, A. M., Principal, and the English Academy, with R. H. L. Atkin- 
son, B. S., Principal. The South Hall of the Institute erected. Miss Har- 
riet E. Spratt elected Principal of the Institute. The College Herald started. 
Baptist Church edifice dedicated, June 26th, 1870. 

Attendance — College, 64; English Academy, 28 ; Classical Prepara- 
tory, 29; Institute, 94. Total, 215. Attendance in College decade, average, 
61. 

1870-71. Jonathan Jones, A. B., Principal of the English Academy. 

Attendance — College, JJ ; Classical Preparatory, 36 ; English Acad- 
emy, 37; Institute, 95. Total, 245. 

1871-72. Freeman Loomis, A. M., made Professor of Modern Lan- 
guages. Two books of the Anabasis added to requirements for admission. 

Attendance — College, 79 ; Classical Preparatory, 34 ; English Acad- 
emy, 37; Institute, 116. Total, 266. 

1872-73. Two terms of German and one term of French added to 
curriculum. Four orations of Cicero added to requirements for admission. 

Attendance — College, 71; Classical Preparatory, 32; Academy, 41; 
Institute, 123. Total, 267. 

1873-74. Bequest of John C. Davis. Requirement in Anabasis in- 
creased from two to three books. William E. Martin, A. M., Principal of 
the Academy. Professor George Ripley Bliss, D. D., resigned the chair of 
Greek. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 27 

Attendance — College, 72; Preparatory, 21; Academy, 36; Institute, 
117. Total, 246. 

1874-75. Francis W. Tustin, A. M., Professor of Greek. Cornelius 
W. Larison, M. D., Professor of Science, and Librarian. David J. Hill, 
A. B., Tutor in Rhetoric. Professors Lowry and Larison resigned. 

Attendance — College, 74 ; Preparatory, 34 ; Academy, 30 ; Institute, 
114. Total, 252. 

1875-76. "Centennial Endowment" effort. One book of Odyssey 
added to requirements for admission. William T. Grier, A. M., elected to 
the chair of Latin, vacant since 1854, the duties meanwhile performed by 
professors in other departments. The chairs of Rhetoric and Natural 
Science vacant. First elective introduced. Scientific course raised from 
three to four years by introducing Latin Grammar and Reader, Caesar, 
Cicero's Orations, Vergil, and some college Latin, and dropping English 
Literature and one year of Mathematics. Thursday morning lectures 
established. 

Attendance — College, 74 ; Preparatory, 34 ; Academy, 30 ; Institute, 
98. Total, 236. 

1876-77. Chairs of Rhetoric and Natural Science vacant. Dr. C. W. 
Larison instructs in Zoology, and Dr. G. G. Groffin Chemistry. Professor 
James retires from the chair of Mathematics. 

Attendance — College, 66 ; Preparatory, 20; Academy, 31; Institute, 
94. Total, 211. 

1877-78. David J. Hill, A. M., Crozer Professor of Rhetoric. Chairs 
of Mathematics and of Natural Science vacant. Cornelius W. Larison, M. D., 
instructor in Zoology, giving a part of his time to the College. Miss 
Harriet E. Spratt, Principal of the Institute, resigned. 

Attendance — College, 59; Preparatory, 17; Academy, 29; Institute, 
94. Total, 199. 

1878-79. Jonathan Jones, A. M., Principal of the Institute. Charles 
S. Allen, Ph. B., Professor of Natural Science ; George M. Phillips, A. M., 
Professor of Mathematics. Professor Freeman Loomis, A. M., retired from 
the principalship of the Preparatory Department, and it is consolidated with 
the Academy ; William E. Martin, A. M., Principal of both. Professors 
Loomis, Hill, Grier, and Philips instruct in the Academy. Campus graded 
at a cost of $3,400 ; contributed by President Loomis, $2,500 ; by Professor 
LoOmis, $900. At the close of the fall term Rev. Justin R. Loomis, 
LL. D., retires from the Presidency, and Professor F. W. Tustin, Senior 



28 Memorials of Bucknell University. 

Professor, acts as President for the rest of the year. First Doctorate of 
Philosophy bestowed on an alumnus, Francis W. Tustin, A. M. 

Attendance — College, 44 ; Academy, 26 ; Institute, 65. Total, 135. 

1 879-80. Rev. David J. Hill, A. M., President ; George G. Groff, A. M., 
Professor of Science ; Professor Grier, Librarian ; Chair of Rhetoric vacant. 
Courses added in Calculus, Analytical Chemistry, and English Literature. 
Seven elective courses in all. Honor courses established. Cresswell Collec- 
tion of 1,700 volumes added to the library by gift; the Loomis Collection, 
550 volumes, by purchase. The Alumni Alcove begun, Rev. W. H. Conard, 
A. M., chairman of committee. Library opened daily, except Sunday, for 
consultation. 

Attendance — College, 51; Academy, 55; Institute, 65. Total, 171. 
Attendance in College decade, average, 66. 

1880-81. Rev. Albert E. Waffle, A. M., Crozer Professor of Rhetoric. 
Plane Geometry and Elements of Rhetoric required for admission. Mr. 
Bucknell establishes an alcove in the library. One hundred thousand dollars 
added to the endowment, Rev. George M. Spratt, D. D., acting as agent for 
the Trustees in raising this sum, President Hill having secured Mr. Buck- 
nell's pledge of $50,000, conditional on the raising of $100,000 and certain 
changes in the charter. Contributors of $1,000 or more to this fund 
were : William Bucknell, $50,000 ; S. A. Crozer, $6,000 ; James Irving, 
$5,000; Mrs. S. L. Crozer, $2,000, and Robert H. Crozer, Benjamin Gartside, 
Rev. D. P. Leas, S. E. McVitty, Mrs. Isaac Ford, George Porter, Mrs. S. D. 
Young, George F. Miller, and W. H. Starbuck, each $1,000. Professor 
Philips resigns the Chair of Mathematics. 

Attendance — College, 63 ; Academy, 75 ; Institute, 82. Total, 220. 

1881-82. William C. Bartol, A. M., Professor of Mathematics. Reor- 
ganization of the University; one Board of Trustees, numbering twenty-five, 
taking the place and powers of the Board of Trustees, twenty in number, 
and the Board of Curators, forty in number. Eighteen thousand dollars raised 
by Dr. Spratt to save the property, by getting the proposed course of the 
Reading Railroad changed. Death, January 5th, 1882, of Jonathan Jones, 
A. M., Principal of the Institute. Mrs. Katherine B. Larison in charge for 
the rest of the year, and elected Principal at the next meeting of the 
Board. 

Attendance — College, 65 ; Academy, 70; Institute, 103. Total, 238. 

1882-83. New Testament Greek added as a Senior Elective. Anthro- 
pology introduced as a required study, Senior year. Eleven elective*. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 29 

Young Men's Christian Association organized. The Philadelphia and 
Reading Railroad open to Lewisburg. 

Attendance — College, 69 ; Academy, 72 ; Institute, no. Total, 251. 

1883-84. Mr. Bucknell contributes $20,000 to establish scholarships 
in the College, and $2,000 to establish prizes in the Institute ; also $6,000 
for the general improvement of the property. 

Attendance — College, 75 ; Academy, 61 ; Institute, 102. Total, 238. 

1884-85. Death, October 26th, of Professor Grier. Requirements for 
admission raised by the addition of two books each of Caesar's Commen- 
taries and Vergil's yEneid and Homer's Iliad ; two orations of Cicero and 
one book of the Anabasis. To enter the Latin Scientific Course, one year 
of Latin is required after '84-5. Also, for all courses the History of the 
United States, and for the Classical Course the History of Greece and of 
Rome. Frank E. Rockwood, A. M., elected Professor of Latin. Resigna- 
tion of Professor Waffle. First woman graduated from the College, Miss 
Chella Scott. 

Attendance — College, 87; Academy, 44; Institute, 112. Total, 235 
(omitting names repeated). 

1885-86. William G. Owens. A. M., Adjunct Professor of Natural 
Sciences. Enoch Perrine, A.M., Crozer Professor of Rhetoric, and Librarian. 
Bucknell Hall erected. A course in the history of Europe, and in the history 
of England added to the curriculum, Scientific Division. The Alumni 
Club of Philadelphia raise $3,000 toward erecting a gymnasium, and 
recommend the general association of Alumni to undertake the erection of 
such building. The Alumni Association, June 22d, 1886, agree, and appoint 
Professor F. W. Tustin, Rev. W. H. Conard, Rev. T. H. Chapman, O. W. 
Spratt, T. R. Jones, Esq., and Rev. A. J. Furman a committee to secure 
funds for the purpose. 

Attendance — College, 84; Academy, 41; Institute, 88. Total, 210 
(exclusive of repetitions). 

1886-87. The Astronomical Observatory presented by Mr. Bucknell. 
The Institution named " The Bucknell University at Lewisburg." Death 
of Professor F. W. Tustin, Ph. D., April 15th, 1887. The Greek Scientific 
Course established. Principal W. E. Martin appointed chairman of Gym- 
nasium Committee, vice Professor Tustin, deceased. It was resolved by 
the Alumni that the proposed gymnasium be called " The Tustin Gymna- 
sium." The Observatory dedicated. The Commencement News issued. 
The Junior annual, L Agenda, founded. The " Students' Loan Associa- 



3<d Memorials of Bucknell University. 

tion " (Institute) organized. William H. Backus, M. D., leaves his property, 
appraised at $48,109, for the endowment of the Library. 

Attendance — College, 64; Academy, 49; Institute, 93. Total, 200. 

1887-88. The Department of Natural Science divided, Professor Groff 
taking " Organic Sciences," and Professor Owens " Physics and Chem- 
istry." Willard A. Robinson, A. M., Instructor in Greek. Elysee Avirag- 
net, M. A., teacher of Music. A course added in Biology and in Practical 
Astronomy. The Committee on Gymnasium report a total subscription of 
$5,000. Bucknell Academy given its own corps of teachers. Rev. David 
J. Hill, LL. D., resigns the presidency to accept that of Rochester Univer- 
sity. Mr. Bucknell adds $50,000 to the endowment. First Doctorate of 
Laws bestowed upon an alumnus, Chauncey B. Ripley, A. M. 

Attendance — College 74 ; Academy, 62 ; Institute, 84. Total, 228. 

1888-89. George G. Groff, M. D., LL. D., acting President. Clarence 
F. Castle, Ph. D., Professor of Greek ; James H. Hyslop, Ph. D., Instructor 
in Psychology and Ethics. The cottage of the Institute and East Hall of 
the Academy erected by Mr. Bucknell. In May, 1889, John H. Harris, 
Ph. D., elected President. First Registrar elected, William C. Gretzinger. 
First honorary degree bestowed upon a woman, Master of Arts, upon Mrs. 
Katherine B. Larison. 

Attendance — College, 74; Academy, 79; Institute, 74; Specials in 
Music, Art, and Elocution, 75. Total, 301. 

1889-90. The Finance Committee of the Trustees (July 8th) author- 
ize the erection of the Gymnasium on the basis of the $5,000 pledged by 
the Alumni and friends. Curricula of the Academy and Institute corre- 
lated with each other and with the College. The College curricula revised, 
and a course in Science leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science added. 
Twenty -two electives offered. Greek Testament required of all in the 
Classical and Greek Philosophical courses. Requirements for entering the 
Latin Philosophical Course increased by six books of Vergil ; for Greek 
Philosophical, one year of Latin ; for all courses, quadratic equations. 
March 5th, 1890, death of William Bucknell. June 25th, Gymnasium 
dedicated ; balance needed for paying for it, so far as then completed, raised 
by Rev. James W. Putnam. The Laboratory accepted from the Committee 
designated by the donor, William Bucknell. School of Music organized, 
Elysee Aviragnet, director. 

Attendance— College, 71; Academy, 8y ; Institute, 83; School of 
Music, 57. Total, 285. Average attendance in College, decade, 73. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 31 

1890-91. The Valedictory, Salutatory, and Master's orations discon- 
tinued. Graduate courses leading to the Master's degree authorized. The 
Classical and Latin Scientific courses in the Institute established. Alumni 
representation adopted by the Board. 

Attendance — College, 103; Academy, 87; Institute, 89; School of 
Music, 56. Total, 320. 

1891-92. Society for Chemical and Physical Research established. 
One hundred thousand dollars raised for increasing the endowment, Rev. 
James W. Putnam serving as chairman of the committee. M. B. Livingston 
Scholarships, twenty-two in number, endowed. Two graduate students 
admitted. The libraries of the literary societies deposited in the University 
library. Professor Castle resigned. 

Attendance — College, 128; Academy, 84; Institute, 82; School of 
Music, 90. Total, 339. 

1892-93. Thomas F. Hamblin, A.M., appointed New Jersey Professor 
of Greek. Electives introduced into the third term Sophomore year. 
Philosophy of Religion introduced as a required study. Electives added in 
Hebrew, Anglo-Saxon, Roman Law, American Constitutional Law, Vege- 
table Histology, Animal Histology, Embryology and Integral Calculus, 
and three additional electives offered in. Latin, and one each in German 
and French. 

Attendance — College, 144; Academy, 75; Institute, Sy ; School of 
Music, 106. Total, 351. 

1893-94. Lincoln Hulley, A. M., Professor of History and Hebrew. 
Electives added in American Constitutional History, History of England, 
Biblical Literature (two), Shakespeare, Advanced Composition, Civil Engi- 
neering, and Human Osteology. Junior Debate established. Charles Miller 
Fellowship established by Hon. Charles Miller, Franklin, Pa. The Longan 
Scholarship endowed by O. W. Longan, Esq. 

Attendance — College, 148 ; Academy, 75 ; Institute, 95 ; School of 
Music, 87. Total, 353. 

1894-95. First trustee nominated by the Alumni, Principal George M. 
Philips, Ph. D. William Emmett Martin, A. M., Professor of Logic and An- 
thropology ; Heman Lincoln Wayland, D.D., Lecturer on Sociology; George 
Dana Boardman, D. D., LL. D., Lecturer on Social Ethics ; Thomas A. 
Edwards, A. M., Principal of the Academy. Electives added in American 
Colonial History, Constitutional History of England, History of England 
since Accession of George II, and in Parliamentary Law. Professor Martin 



32 Memorials of Bucknell University. 

appointed Librarian. Six hundred and twenty volumes added to the 
Library. Coxey Alcove begun. Natural History Society established. First 
Master's degrees, pro merito, awarded Miss Mary Bartol, A. B., and Miss 
Mary B. Harris, A. B. 

Attendance — College, 171; Academy, 85; Institute, 98; School of 
Music, 103. Total, 384. 

1895-96. Electives added in Oratorical Delivery, in German four 
courses, in French three courses, in Advanced Algebra, in Advanced 
Analytical Geometry, in American Civics, in the History of Modern Europe 
one course additional, and in Human Anatomy with Dissection. Number 
of full courses (five hours per week) required and elective offered, ninety- 
four; lecture courses offered (one hour per week), thirteen; honor courses, 
twenty-one. The Eben C. Jayne Scholarships established. Whole number 
of scholarships, 55. Volumes added to the Library, 1895-96, 2,112; 
present number of volumes, 16,000. 

Attendance — College, 205 ; Academy, 93 ; Institute, 92 ; School of 
Music, 113. Total, 431. 

Average attendance in the College, 1890-96, 149. 




Hon. George F. Miller, LL. D. 

Curator, 1846-1882. Scribe of Curators, 1847-1851. Secretary of Trustees, 1848-1864. 



IRequtrements for Hbmission. 



(To the Classical Course.) 



1852. 
English Grammar, 



Arithmetic. 



Latin Grammar, 
Latin Reader, 
Caesar, 2 Books, 
Vergil, 4 Books, 



Greek Grammar, 
Greek Reader. 



1875. 
English Grammar, 



Arithmetic, 

Algebra to Quadratics, 

Latin Grammar, 
Latin Reader, 
Caesar, 2 Books, 
Vergil, 4 Books, 
Cicero, 4 Orations, 
Latin Prose, 
History of Rome, 
Greek Grammar, 
Greek Reader, 
Anabasis, 3 Books, 
Odyssey, I Book, 
Greek Prose. 



1888. 
English Grammar, 
English Composition, 
Rhetoric, 
Arithmetic, 
Algebra to Quadratics, 
Plane Geometry, 
Latin Grammar, 
Latin Reader, 
Caesar, 4 Books, 
Vergil, 6 Books, 
Cicero, 6 Orations, 
Latin Prose, 
History of Rome, 
Greek Grammar, 
Greek Reader, 
Anabasis, 4 Books, 
Iliad, 3 Books, 
Greek Prose, 
History of Greece, 
History of U. S., 
Physiology. 



1895. 
English Grammar, 
English Composition, 
Rhetoric, 

Arithmetic, [ratics, 

Algebra through Quad- 
Plane Geometry, 
Latin Grammar, 
Latin Reader, 
Csesar, 4 Books, 
Vergil, 6 Books, 
Cicero, 6 Orations, 
Latin Prose, 
History of Rome, 
Greek Grammar, 
Greek Reader, 
Anabasis, 4 Books, 
Iliad, 3 Books, 
Greek Prose, 
History of Greece, 
History of U. S., 
Physiology. 



Comparison of Courses. 

Full courses, five hours a week, are printed in Roman type ; lecture courses, one hour a week, 
have the letter L appended ; honor courses are printed in Italics. 



department of jEngusb. 



1852. 1875. 

1 Blair's Rhetoric, I Rhetoric (half teim), 

2 History of Literature. 2 Whately's Rhetoric, 

3 English Lit. (L). 



1 

1 Rhetoric, 

2 Literature, 

3 English Oratory, 

4 American Literature, 

5 Essay and Oration (L). 



1895. 

1 Rhetoric, 

2 Literature, 

3 American Literature, 

4 English Oratory, 

5 Anglo-Saxon, 

6 Shakespeare, 

7 Adv. Composition, 

8 Chaucer, 

9 Milton, 

10 Early English, 

11 Piers the Plowman, 

12 Ancren Riwle, 

13 Essay and Oration 

(L), 

14 American Lit. (L), 

15 Eng. Versi'n (L). 

35 



36 



Memorials of Bucknell University 



department ot Xatin. 



1852. 



1 Livy, 

2 Livy, 



1875. « 

1 Livy, I Livy, 

2 Cicero de Senectute. 2 Cicero de Senectute. 



3 Cicero de Senectute, 3 Horace, 



3 Horace, 



4 Horace, Odes, 

5 Horace, Satires and 

Epics, 

6 Cicero de Officiis. 



4 Cicero de Officiis, 4 Tacitus, 

5 Tacitus, 5 Pliny, 



1852. 

1 Anabasis, 

2 Anabasis, 

3 Odyssey, 

4 Iliad, 

5 Demosthenes, 

6 Sophocles, 

7 Gorgias of Plato. 



6 Juvenal. 



6 Latin Poets, 

7 Terence and Juvenal. 



Department ot (Sreefc. 



1875. 

f Herodotus, 
I Thucydides, 

2 Memorabilia, 

3 Hiad, 

4 Plato, Apology, 

5 Sophocles, 

6 Demosthenes, 

7 Gorgias of Plato. 



I Odyssey, 

f Herodotus, 
I Thucydides, 

3 Memorabilia, 

4 Sophocles, 

5 Demosthenes, Pop. 

Orations, 

6 Plato, Apology, 

7 Greek Testament. 



«{ 



1895. 

1 Cicero de Senectute, 

2 Livy, Books I, XXI, 

and XXII, 

3 Velleius' Paterculus, 

and Pliny, 

4 Horace, 

5 Juvenal, 

6 Quintilian, 

7 Latin Poets, 

8 Cic. de Nat. Deorum, 

9 Tacitus, Agricola and 

Germania, 

10 Seneca, 

11 Nepos, 

12 Sallust, 

13 Ovid, 

14 Cicero de Officiis, 
Tacitus, Histories, 
Suetonius, Ccesars, 

16 Plautus and Terence, 
f Tertullian, 
\. Latin Hymns. 



1895. 
I Lysias, 

f Herodotus, 
I Thucydides, 

3 Odyssey, 

4 Memorabilia, 

5 Demosthenes, Olyn- 

thiacs, 

6 Sophocles or Euripi- 

des, 

7 Plato, Apology and 

Crito, 

8 Demosthenes, de Cor- 

ona, 

9 New Testament, 

10 Xen., Economics, 

11 7/£<r Odyssey, 

12 /Ytf/0, Phado, 

13 Greek Literature. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



37 



Department of Ibebrew. 



1852. 

1 Algebra, Elementary, 

2 Algebra, 

3 Geometry (Plane), 

4 Geometry (Solid), 

5 Trigonometry, 

6 Surveying, 

7 Analytical Geometry, 

8 Astronomy. 



Department of afrencb. 



1875- 

1 Elementary Course, 

2 Classic Authors. 



Elementary Course, 
Classic Authors, 
19th Cent. Authors, 



Department of (Berman. 



1875. 

1 Elementary Course, 

2 Prose Readings, 



1 Elementary Course, 

2 Intermediate Prose, 

3 Schiller, 



Department of /Ifcatbematics. 

1875. 

1 Geometry (Plane), 

2 Geometry, 

3 Algebra (College), 

4 Trigonometry, 

5 Analytical Geometry, 

6 Surveying, 

7 Astronomy. 



1 Solid Geometry, 

2 Algebra (College), 
f Trigonometry, 
I Surveying, 

4 Analytical Geometry, 

5 Astronomy, 

6 Practical Astronomy, 

7 Calculus. 



1895. 

1 Elements of Hebrew, 

2 Advanced Hebrew, 

3 Cognate Semitic Lan- 

guages. 



1895. 

1 Elementary Course, 

2 Intermediate Course, 

3 17th Cent. Authors, 

4 1 8th Cent. Authors, 

5 19th Cent. Authors, 
6-8 Freshmen French, 3 

Courses. 



1895. 

1 Elementary Course, 

2 Intermediate Prose, 

3 Schiller, 

4 Goethe, 

5 Lessing, 

6 Modern Authors, 

7 Advanced Prose, 
8-IO Freshmen, 3 

Courses. 



1895. 

1 Solid Geometry, 

2 Algebra (College), 

3 Trigonometry, 

4 Analytical Geometry, 

5 Derivatives (L), 

6 Linear Perspective, 

7 Advanced Algebra, 

8 Advanced Analytics, 

9 Differential Calculus, 

10 Integral Calculus, 

11 Astronomy, 

12 Practical Astronomy, 

13 Surveying, 

14 Civil Engineering, 

15 City Surveying. 



33 



Memorials of Bucknell University 



Department ot GbemfsttE ano IP bastes. 





1852. 


1875- 


1888. 


1895. 


I 


Natural Philosophy, 


1 Natural Philosophy, 


1 General Chemistry, 


1 Elemen'ry Chemistry, 


2 


Natural Philosophy, 


2 Natural Philosophy, 


2 Analytical Chemistry, 


2 Chemistry (L), 


3 


Natural Philosophy, 


3 Chemistry, 


3 Applied Chemistry, 


3 General Chemistry, 


4 


Chemistry. 


4 Chemistry. 


4 Quantitative Analysis 

5 Mechanics, 

6 Physics. 


, 4 Analytical Chemistry, 

5 Quantit'tive Analysis, 

6 Organic Chemistry, 

7 Benzine Series, 

8 Organic Analysis, 

9 Toxicology, 

10 Water Analysis, 

11 Theories of Chem- 

istry, 

12 Mechanics, 

13 Sound, Heat, and 

Light, 

14 Magnetism and Elec. 

1 5 Experimental Course. 






Department ot ©rganic Science. 






1852. 


1875. 


1888. 


1895. 


i 


Geology. 


1 Physiology, 


1 Hygiene (L), 


1 Hygiene (L), 






2 Botany, 


2 Botany, 


2 Physiology, 






3 Geology. 


3 Physiology, 

4 Biology, 

/Geology, 
I Mineralogy, 


f Histology, 
l Embryology, 
/ Osteology, 
I Comparative Anat., 
5 Human Anat. with 








Dissection, 








6 Sanitary Science (L). 


6 Biology, 

7 Zoology, 

8 Botany, 

9 Plant Histology, 
10 Geology (L), 

, x / Geology, 
I Mineralogy, 

12 Sanitary Science (L), 

13 Microscopy. 




Department ot ^Economics ano Social Science. 




1852. 


1875. 


1888. 


1895. 


i 


Political Economy, 


1 Political Economy. 


1 Economics, 


1 Economics, 


2 


U. S. Constitution. 




2 American Civics. 


2 Economics, 

3 American Const. Law, 

4 American Civics, 

5 Roman Law, 

6 Sociology (L). 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



39 



department of /Ifoeoieval ano /Ifcooern 1biston>. 



1875. 1888. 


I895- 


I Medieval History (L). 1 Medieval, 


I Medieval Europe, 


2 Modern. 


2 Mod. Europe, to 1648, 




3 Mod. Europe, to 1870, 




4 History of England, 




5 Eng. Constitutional, 




6 American Colonial, 




7 Am. Constitutional, 



Department of biblical Xiterature. 



8 Parliamentary Law. 



1895. 
Biblical Literature (L),. 

{Prophets, 
Psalmody and Wis- 
dom, 
f Acts of the Apostles,. 
I Pauline Epistles. 



Department of %oq\c ano BntbropoloaE. 



1852. 

1 Logic (Hedge), 

2 Logic ("Whately), 



1875. 
Logic (Whately), 



1 Logic, 

2 Anthropology. 



1895. 

1 Logic, 

2 Theories of Logic, 

3 Anthropology, 

4 Anthropology. 



Department of /Ifoental ano /Iftoral fl>bilosopb£. 



1852. 

1 Natural Theology, 

2 Intellectual Philos.. 

3 Moral Philosophy, 

4 Butler's Analogy. 



1875. 

1 Intellectual Philos. 

2 Moral Philosophy, 

3 Moral Philosophy, 

4 Butler's Analogy. 



1888. 

1 Psychology, 

2 Ethics, 

3 Practical Ethics (L). 



1895. 

1 Psychology, 

2 Hamilton 's Meta- 

physics, 

3 History of Education 

(L), 

4 Ethics, 

5 Hist, of Philosophy, 

6 Philos. of Education,. 

7 Physiological Psy- 

chology, 

8 Philos. of Religion, 

9 Modem Philosophy, 

10 Lotze, Psychologie, 

11 Practical Ethics (L), 



IRumber of Stuoents tn eacb Subject 



The number is taken for the year 1895-96. In case subjects are given 
on alternate years, the number for each year is given. Full studies, five 
hours per week, are printed in Roman; lecture courses, one hour per week, 
in italic ; honor courses are designated by the letter H ; elective courses by 
the letter E. 

Englisb* 

Rhetoric, 46 ; English Literature, 41 ; English Oratory (E), 27 ; Anglo- 
Saxon (E), 3 ; Shakespeare (E), 10; Advanced Composition (E), 16 ; Amer- 
ican Literature (L), 35 ; The Essay and Oration (L), 69; Wordsworth (L), 
.46; Chaucer (H), 10; Milton (H), 8 ; American Literature (Freshmen), 7. 

Xatiru 

Cicero de Senectute, 49 ; Livy, 44; Velleius, 42 ; Horace, 29; Ovid (H), 
9 ; Juvenal (E), 13 ; Quintilian (E), 6 ; Latin Poets (E), 3 ; Cicero de Officiis 
(H), 2 ; Cicero de Amicitia (H), 2 ; Cicero de Natura Deorum (E), 8 ; Taci- 
tus (E), 1 ; Seneca (E), 4; Plautus and Terence (E), 6; Sallust, 14; Ovid, 
10 ; Nepos, 17. 

Greefe, 

Lysias, 29 ; Herodotus and Thucydides, 29 ; Odyssey, 30 ; Xenophon's 
Memorabilia, 2; Xenophon's CEconomicus (H), 2; Demosthenes, 18; De- 
mosthenes de Corona (E), 1 ; Greek New Testament, Gospels, 29 ; Acts and 
Epistles (E), 9; Plato, Apology, and Crito, 18; Phaedo, 5 ; Sophocles, 3; 
Greek Literature (L), 35. 

toebrew* 

Elements of Hebrew (E), 14; Advanced Hebrew (E), 13; Hebrew 

(H), 5- 
40 




Thomas Wattson. 

Trustee, 1846-1874. Chairman, 1850-1874. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 43 

German. 

Elementary Course, 14; Intermediate Prose (E), 9; Schiller's Works 
(E), 5 ; Goethe's Works (E), 1 ; Freshmen (three terms), 44 ; Freshmen 
(H), 7. 

ffrencb. 

Elementary Course, 20; Intermediate Prose (E), 6; Seventeenth 
Century Authors (E), 4 ; Freshmen (three terms), 8. 

flDatbematics. 

Solid Geometry, 67 ; College Algebra, 67 ; Trigonometry, 65 ; Ana- 
lytical Geometry, 67 ; Differential Calculus, 26 ; Integral Calculus (E), 9 ; 
Derivatives (L), 68; Quaternions (H), 2; Astronomy, 33; Practical 
Astronomy (E), 3; Mechanical Dr diving (L), 42; Surveying, 17; City 
Engineering (E A), 18 ; Civil Engineering (E A), 1 1. 

IPb^stcs anfc Gbemistr^ 

Mechanics, 34; Physics, 34; Electricity (L), 34; Electricity (E), 10; 
Experimental Mechanics (H), 2 ; Elementary Chemistry, 24 ; Descriptive 
Chemistry (L), 60; General Chemistry, 50; Analytical Chemistry (E), 18; 
Organic Analysis (E), 13 ; Ultimate Organic Analysis (E), 6; Quantitative 
Analysis (E), 5 ; Toxicology (E), 4 ; Water Analysis (E), 3 ; Modern Theo- 
ries of Chemistry (H), 3 ; Chemical Philosophy (H), 2. 

©rganic Science. 

Animal Physiology, 47; Animal Histology (E), 14; Embryology (E), 
14; Human Osteology (E), 10; Comparative Anatomy (E), 10; Human 
Anatomy with Dissections (E), 6; Biology (E), 15; Zoology (E), 14; 
Botany, 45 ; Plant Histology (E), 1 1 ; Microscopy (E), 4 ; Hygiene (L), 67 ; 
Sanitary Science (L), 45; Dynamical Geology (L), 36; Mineralogy and 
Geology (E), 22. 

Economics ant) Social Science. 

Economics (E), 14; Economics (H), 3; American Constitutional Law 
(E), 18; American Civics (E), 20; Roman Law (E), 6; Sociology (H), 3. 
Lectures to students in all the departments. 



44 Memorials of Bucknell University. 

Ibistors* 

Mediaeval Europe (E), 15 ; Modern Europe (E), 17; History of Eng- 
land (E), 26; Constitutional History of England (E), 32 ; Stubb's Constitu- 
tional History of England (H), 5 ; The Victorian Era (H), 10 ; American 
Colonial History (E), 24 ; Constitutional History of the United States (E), 
18; Parliamentary Law and Extemporaneous Speaking (E), 20. 



%oqxc anb Bntbropolog£. 

Logic (E), 22 ; Logical Theories (H), 3 ; Anthropology, 1 1 ; Anthro- 
pology (H), 13. 

Biblical ^Literature* 

English Bible, O. T. (E), 15 ; English Bible, N. T. (E), 31 ; Lectures, 35. 

flfoental ant) flDoral pbilosopbp* 

Psychology, 36 ; History of Education, 36 ; Ethics, 36 ; History of 
Philosophy, 35 ; Philosophy of Education (H), 4 ; Physiological Psychology 
(H), 6; Philosophy of Religion, 36; Grundziige der Psychologie (H), 2; 
Bowen's Modern Philosophy (H), 3 ; Hamilton's Metaphysics (H), 2. 





Adie Kyle Bell, D. D. 

Trustee, 1849-1882. Treasurer, 1853-1864. Chairman, 1874-1879. 



Boarbs of Control. 



(the names of alumni are in italics.) 

Cbatrmen of tbc JBoaro of {Trustees. 

1850-74 Thomas Wattson, 

1874-79 Adie K. Bell, D. D., 

1879-82 William Shadrach, D. D., 

1882-90 William Bucknell, 

1890 Harry S. Hopper. 







trustees. 


1846-55 James Moore, 


1849-56 


1846-63 


James Moore, Jr., 


1850-50 


1846-67 Joseph Meixel], 


1850-53 


1846-48 


William H. Ludwig, M. D., 


1851-66 


1 846-50 


Samuel Wolfe, 


1851-74 


1846-49 


L. B. Christ, 


1854-56 


1846-49 


Henry Frick, 


1854-76 


1846-51 


Rev. J. E. Bradley, A. M., 


1854-82 


1846-50 


Rev. E. Kincaid, D. D., 


1855-71 


1846-60 


Benjamin Bear, 


1855-58 


1846-49 


W. W. Keen, 


1856-60 


1846-63 


William Bucknell, 


1856-92 


1846-74 


William Wattson, 


1856-64 


1846-51 


James M. Linnard, 


1857-85 


1 846-49 


Ludwig Vastine, 


1858-82 


1846-54 


Oliver Blackburn, 


1860-62 


1847-66 


John P. Crozer, 


1860-82 


1848-54 


Rev. G. B. Ide, D. D., 


1863-82 


1848-55 


Rev. S. J. Cresswell, D. D., 


1863-87 


1849-71 


Rev. Wm. Shadrach, D. D., 


1863-82 


1849-70 


Samuel T. Walker, 


1864-66 


1849-82 


Adam Johnston, 


1866-67 


1849-82 


Rev. A. K. Bell, D. D., 


1866-83 



John Lloyd, 

Rev. A. D. Gillette, D.D., 

Rev. J. V. Allison, 

David Jayne, M. D., LL. D., 

Park H. Cassady, 

Rev. John Dowling, D. D., 

Isaac Ford, 

Rev. J. Wheaton Smith, D. D., 

Hon. P. P. Runyon, 

A. B. Longshore, M. D., 

Rev. H. Day, D. D., 

Rev. J. P. lustin, A. M., 

A. Shallenberger, 

H. J. Mulford, 

E. B. Campbell, 

Rev. W. T. Brantley, D. D., 

Henry Gerhart, 

C. F. Abbott, A. M., 

Henry Croskey, 

Rev. J. G. Miles, 

George B. Jones, 

John P. Levy, 

Samuel A. Crozer, 

47 



4 8 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



1866 
1867 
1868 
1869- 
1872- 
1872- 
1872- 
1875- 
1875- 
1875- 
1876- 
1876- 
1877- 
1877- 
1877- 
1879- 
1882- 
1882- 
1882- 
1882 
1882 
1882- 
1882- 
1882 



-69 James Lippincott, 1882-88 

-82 Rev. J. R. Loomis, LL. D., 1882 

-79 E. A. Coray, 1882 

-77 C. S. Overholt, 1882 

-75 Rev. J. H Castle, D. D., 1884 

-82 William H. Finn, M. D., 1887 

-87 Rev. D. J. Yerkes, D. D., 1887 

-76 T. J. Hoskinson, 1887-90 

-82 William H Harrison, A. M., 1887 

-91 Charles S. Wolfe, A. M., 1887-93 

-82 James Moore, 1889 

-91 George Callaghan, 1889 

-95 James Irving, 1890-95 

-90 Rev. Wm. Shadrach, D. D., 1890-94 

-82 Rev. Augustus H. Lung, A. M., 1891 

-91 Thomas J. Hoskinson, 1891 

-91 Charles H. Banes, 1894 

-90 William Bucknell, 1894 

-93 Rev. Benj. Griffith, D. D., 1894 

Harry S. Hopper, ^94 

Rev. D. P. Leas, A.M., 1894 

-84 Hon. Charles Miller, 1894 

-87 Thomas Moore, 1894 
Rev. A. J. Rowland, D. D., 



Wm. S. Shallenberger, A. M., 
Rev. George M. Spratt, D. D., 
Rev. Leroy Stephens, A. M., 
Rev. Henry G. Weston, D. D., 
James S. Swartz, 
Hon. James Buchanan, A. M., 
John H. Harris, Ph. D., 
Wayland Hoyt, D. D., 
Craige Lippincott, 
James H. Little, Esq., 
Rev. C. C. Bitting, D. D., 
D. Bright Miller, 
Rev. James W. Putnam, 
Alfred Taylor, Esq., 
Joseph K. Weaver, M. D., 
Hon. S. P. Wolverton, A. M., 
John P. Crozer, 
Hiram E. Deats, 
Calvin Greene, 
Eben C. Jayne, 
Hon. Charles Miller, 
Ernest L. Tustin, Esq., 
George M. Philips, Ph. D. 



Secretaries of tbe ^Trustees. 



1846-48 Rev. J. E. Bradley, A. M., 
1848-64 Hon. G. F. Miller, LL. D., 



1864-82 Rev. J. P. Tustin, A. M., 
1882 Rev. A. J. Rowland, D. D. 



treasurers of tbe trustees. 



1846-48 James Moore, 
1848-49 Samuel Wolfe, 
1849-52 Samuel T. Walker, 
1852-53 Joseph Meixell, 



1853-64 Rev. A. K. Bell, D. D., 
1864-77 Rev. J. A. Kelly, A. M., 
1877-82 Rev. A. K. Bell, D. D., 
1882 Rev. David P. Leas, A. M. 



Boar& of Curators* 



1846-49 Abbott Green, 
1846-54 Rev. G. S. Webb, D. D., 
1846-50 Rev. William Shadrach, D. D., 
1846-54 Rev. J. L. Burrows, D. D., 
1846-59 Rev. A. D. Gillette, D. D., 
1846-56 Rev. J. H. Kennard, D. D., 
1846-60 William Jewell, M. D., 
1846-52 Rev. A. A. Anderson, 
1846-50 Rev. Charles Tucker, 
1846-54 Simon Schuyler, 



1846-73 Martin Bell, 

1846-64 Hon. Simon Cameron, LL. D., 

1846-57 Joseph Green, 

1846-61 Hon. James Buchanan, LL. D., 

1846-82 Hon. G. F. Miller, LL. D., 

1847-53 R ev. H. G. Jones, D. D., 

1847-57 Rev. G. Kempton, D. D., 

1847-48 Rev. S. J. Creswell, D. D., 

1847-63 John Gundy, 

1847-82 Hon. John Walls, 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



49 



1847-64 
1848-50 
1848-54 
1848-66 
1848-51 
1849-60 
1850-64 
1850-77 

1851-59 
1851-61 
1851-56 
1853-82 
1854-63 
1854-82 

1854-71 
1854-64 
1854-62 
1854-59 

1854-57 
1856-66 
1857-64 
1857-70 
1857-70 
1857-64 
1859-62 
1859-62 

1859-78 
1859-66 
1860-79 
1861-68 
1861-82 
1861-68 
1861-72 
1861-82 
1861-70 



1847-50 Rev. H. G. Jones, D. D., 
1850-54 Rev. Heman Lincoln, D. D., 
1854-64 Rev. G. W. Young, A. M., 
1864-70 Rev. James F. Brown, D. D., 



William Cameron, 


1862-74 


Hon. J. R. Jones, 


1862-82 


Rev. Heman Lincoln, D. L>., 


1862-68 


James F. Linn, Esq., 


1863-82 


John Staines, 


1864-72 


J. P. Ross, 


1864-74 


Rev. G. W. Young, A. M., 


1864-71 


0. N. Worden, 


1864-82 


Rev. J. R. Downer, A. M., 


1864-70 


Rev. E. W. Dickinson, D. D., 


1864-66 


Rev. A. Levering, 


1864-68 


Rev. James F. Brown, D. D., 


1866-70 


Thomas Hayes, 


1866-71 


Hon. Eli Slifer, 


1866-82 


Rev. B. Griffith, D. D., 


1866-82 


Rev. Isaac Bevan, D. D., 


1868-82 


Rev. D. J. Yerkes, D. D., 


1868-82 


Rev. I. W. Hayhurst, A. M., 


1868-82 


Rev. W. H. Parmley, D. D., 


1868-77 


Rev. P. B. Marr, A. M., 


1872-82 


Rev. J. Green Miles, 


1872-82 


Rev. J. S. Dickerson, D. D., 


1872-77 


A. B. Putnam, 


1872-80 


Rev. C. A. Fox, A. M., 


1873-75 


Rev. E. M. Barker, 


1873-81 


David Haynes, A. M., 


1873-78 


Rev. J. A. Kelley, A. M., 


1873-82 


Rev. E. L. Bailey, A. M., 


1873-82 


Rev. Thomas Swaim, D. D., 


1873-75 


Rev. R. A. Fink, A. M., 


1874-78 


Rev. S. H. Myrick, 


1874-82 


Rev. S. H. Dickson, D. D., 


1875-82 


Rev. J. R. Murphy, D. D., 


1875-82 


Rev. A. H. Sembower, 


1875-79 


Rev. J. R. Shanafelt, A. M., 






Cbancellors, 



Rev. P. S. Henson, D. D., 
Rev. G. A. Peltz, A. M., 
Rev. W. S. Wood, A. M., 
John A. Gundy, Sc. B., 
Rev. J. H. Castle, D. D., 
S. H. Orwig, Esq., 
Rev. P. L. Davies, A.M., 
Rev. George Frear, D. D., 
Rev. S. Washington, 
Rev. D. C. Eddy, D. D., 
E. A. Coray, 

Rev. Robert Lozvry, D. D., 
Rev. Amos Myers, 
Rev. Miller Jones, A. M., 
Rev. B. F. Woodburn, A. M., 
Rev. C. M. Deiiz, A. M., 
Rev. 1. C. Wynn, A. M., 
Rev. H. G. Weston, D. D., 
Rev. W, Randolph, D. D., 
Rev. Owen P. Eaches, D. D., 
Rev. A. J. Rowland, A. M., 
Rev. W. P. Hellings, A. M., 
Joseph Moore, 
Henry K. Trask, A. M., 
Rev. L. Stephens, A. M., 
Rev. A. H. Lung, A. M., 
Hon. William B. Leas, 
Rev. H. L. Wayland, D. D., 
Rev. Lemuel Moss, D. D., 
Rev. William Shadrach, D. D., 
Rev. A. J. Furman, 
Rev. R. Lowry, D. D., 
Rev. George Cooper, A. M., 
Rev. R. W. Pearson, D. D. 



1870-71 Rev. J. H. Castle, D. D., 
1871-76 Rev. H. G. Weston, D. D., 
1876-82 Rev. Robert Lowry, D. D. 



1847-51 Hon. G. F. Miller, LL. D., 
1851-62 O. N. Worden, 
1862-67 Rev. S. H. Myrick, 

4 



Scribes. 



1867-69 Rev. Robert Lowry, D. D., 
1869-82 Rev. George Frear, D. D. 



JBi tracts from the Charter. 



The said University shall be under the management, direction, govern- 
ment, and supervision of a number of trustees, not exceeding twenty-five, 
a majority of whom shall constitute a quorum. 

At least four-fifths of the trustees shall be members of regular Baptist 
churches. 

The trustees have power of electing trustees in the place and stead of 
those who shall decline serving, resign or die, or whose places become 
vacant from any other cause ; of electing or appointing the president, pro- 
fessors, tutors, and other teachers of said University ; of agreeing with them 
for their salaries and stipends ; of removing them for misconduct, breaches 
of the ordinances of the institution, or other sufficient causes ; of appointing 
committees of their own body, to carry into effect all the resolutions of the 
Board; of appointing a chairman, secretary, treasurer, and other officers 
necessary for managing the concerns of the corporation ; of providing for 
the maintenance and observance of discipline in said University, and of pre- 
scribing and inflicting the penalties due all violations of rules, ordinances 
or regulations thereof, or to other misconduct committed by students or 
other persons thereat; and generally the majority of the voices of the 
Board, or quorum of said trustees, at any stated or extra meeting, shall 
determine all matters and things (although not herein specified), which shall 
occasionally arise and be incidentally necessary to be determined by said 
trustees : Provided, The said laws, rules, and ordinances, or any of them, 
be not repugnant to the laws and constitution of the United States of 
America, or to the laws and constitution of this Commonwealth. 

As soon as said trustees shall have obtained in the form of subscrip- 
tions believed to be valid the amount of one hundred thousand dollars, 
they shall purchase a lot or farm and proceed to erect thereon suitable 
buildings for the use and benefit of said University, to procure the requisite 
5o 




Wzmz 



Benjamin Griffith, D. D. 

Curator, 1854-1871. Trustee. 1882-1! 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 53 

library, apparatus, and specimens in natural history, and shall exercise their 
own judgment and discretion in so doing, as likewise in the general man- 
agement and disposition of the funds of said University ; Provided, how- 
ever, said trustees shall exact from their treasurer adequate security for all 
moneys and other property of the institution which he may at any time 
receive ; Provided, also, that if any person contributing to the funds of said 
institution, indicate a special appropriation of the amount so contributed, 
said contribution, if accepted, shall be disposed of in strict accordance with 
the evident intent or expressed wish of the contributor. And Provided, 
too, that said trustees shall not for any cause, or under any pretext what- 
ever, encumber by mortgage, or otherwise, the real estate or other property 
of said institution ; and that they shall not involve it in any debt which they 
have not the means of paying, consistently with the restrictions above men- 
tioned. 

The president and professors for the time being shall constitute the 
faculty of the University, and they together with the tutors and other 
teachers in their respective departments shall have the power of enforcing 
the rules and regulations adopted by the trustees for the government and 
instruction of the students ; and the faculty, with the counsel and consent 
of a quorum of the trustees, shall have the power to grant and confirm 
unto students of the University, or others deemed worthy, such degrees in 
the liberal arts and sciences or in certain branches thereof, as have been 
usually granted in other Universities; to grant likewise to said graduates 
diplomas under the common seal of the corporation, in order to authenti- 
cate and to perpetuate the memory of such graduation ; and to grant, also, 
certificates to such students as have duly completed the course of studies 
prescribed in any subordinate department of the University. 

No misnomer of the said corporation shall defeat or annul any gift, 
grant, devise or bequest to or from the said corporation ; Provided, The 
intent of the parties shall sufficiently appear upon the face of the gift, grant, 
will or other writing whereby any estate or interest was intended to pass to 
or from said corporation. 

No religious sentiments are to be accounted as a disability to hinder 
the election of an individual to any office among teachers of the institu- 
tion, or to debar persons from admittance as students in any department of 
the University. 



54 



Memorials of Bucknell University 



£be Boarfc of ftrueteee. 



1895*96. 



Chairman, Harry S. Hopper, Esq., 

28 South Third Street, Philadelphia. 

Secretary, Rev. A. Judson Rowland, D. D., 

1420 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. 

Treasurer, Rev. David P. Leas, A. M., 

400 South Fortieth Street, Philadelphia. 



Rev. C. C. Bitting, D. D., 

Hon. James Buchanan, 

John P. Crozer, Esq., 

Hiram E. Deats, Esq., 

Calvin Greene, Esq., 

President John H. Harris, LL. D. 

Harry S. Hopper, Esq., 

Eben C. Jayne, Esq., 

Rev. David P. Leas, A. M., 

Craige Lippincott, Esq., 

Hon. S. P. 



D. Bright Miller, A. M., 
Hon. Charles Miller, 
George M. Philips, Ph. D., 
Rev. A. Judson Rowland, D. D., 
Rev. George M. Spratt, D. D., 
Rev. Leroy Stephens, D. D., 
James S. Swartz, Esq., 
Ernest L. Tustin, Esq., 
Joseph K. Weaver, M. D., 
Rev. Henry G. Weston, D.D., LL.D. 
Wolverton, A. M. 




EUGENIO KlNCAID, D. D. 
Trustee, 1 846-1 850. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



57 



presidents of tbe TUnivevsttE. 

1851-57 Rev. Howard Malcolm, D. D., LL. D., 

1857-79 R ev - Justin R. Loomis, Ph. D., LL. D., 

1879-88 Rev. David J. Hill, LL. D., 

1889 Rev. John H. Harris, Ph. D., LL. D. 

Beting presidents. 

Stephen W. Taylor, LL. D., prior to 185 1. 
*Rev. George R. Bliss, D. D., LL. D., during 1871-72. 
*Rev. Francis W. Tustin, Ph. D., for 6 months, 1879. 

George G. Groff, M. D., LL. D., 1 year, 1888-89. 



* Senior Professor. 



professors. 

1848-51 Stephen W. Taylor, LL. D., 1877- 

1849-74 Rev. George R. Bliss, D. D., LL. D., 1878- 

1849-54 Rev. George W.Anderson, Ph.D., D.D., 1878- 

i^SJ Rev. Howard Malcom, D. D., LL. D., 1879 

1851-77 Charles S. James, Ph. D., 188c- 

1851-53 Alfred Taylor, A. M., 1881 

1854-79 Rev. J. R. Loomis, Ph. D., LL. D., 1885 

1859-87 Rev. F. W. Tustin, A.M., 1885 

1865-68 Rev. Lucius E. Smith, D. D., 1885 

1865-68 Rev. Lemuel Moss, D. D., 1888- 

1869-75 Rev. Robert Lowry, D. D., 1 892 

187 1 Freeman Loomis, A. M., Ph. D., 1893 

J874-75 C. W. Larison, M. D., 1894 
1875-84 William T. Grier, A.M., 



88 David J. Hill, A. M., LL. L>., 

79 C. S. Allen, Ph. B., 

81 George M. Philips, A.M., 

George G. Groff, M. D., LL. D., 

-85 A. E. Waffle, A. M., D. D., 

William C. Bartol, A.M., Ph.D., 
Frank E. Rockwood, A. M., 
William G. Owens, A. M., 
Enoch Perrine, A. M., Litt. D., 

-92 Clarence F. Castle, Ph.D., 
Thomas F. Ffamblin, A. M., 
Lincoln Hulley, A.M., Ph. D., 
William E. Martin. A. M. 



librarians. 



1849-74 George R. Bliss, D. D., 
1874-79 David J. Hill, A. M., 
1879-84 William T. Grier, A. M., 
1884-85 Frank E. Rockwood, A. M., 



1885-87 Enoch Perrine, A. M., 
1887-94 Freeman Loomis, A. M., 
1894 William E. Martin, A. M. 



{Theological ^Department 



In 1855, a Department of Theology was organized, and continued for 
thirteen years. The first Class graduated in 1857, and the last Class in 
1868, when the Department was discontinued in favor of Crozer Theologi- 
cal Seminary, located at Chester, Pa. The Alumni of this department, at 
the time of the change, were constituted Alumni of the newly created 
Theological Seminary. 



Gbeological professors. 



1855-65 Rev. T. F. Curtis, D. D., 
1860-68 Rev. G. R. Bliss, D. D., 



1865-68 Rev. L. Moss, D. D., 
1865-68 Rev. L. E. Smith, D. D. 



Gbeologtcal Blumni. 



i860 A. J. Amerman, 
1867 J. F. Bender, 
1867 T. E. Clapp, 
1862 Asher Cook, 
1859 William E. Cornwell, 

1864 William F. Cowden, 
1858 Robert Dunlap, 

1865 Owen P. Eaches, 
1858 John Evans, 
1858 George Frear, 
1867 H. B. Garner, 
1867 Thomas A. Gill, 
1867 John S. Hutson, 
1858 Benjamin Jones, 
1858 Isaac Jones, 
1858 Miller Jones, 
1857 Henry B. Johnson, 
1867 J. J. Kane, 

1867 H. F. King, 

58 



1868 Freeman Loomis, 
1866 Webster R. Maul, 
1864 David R. McDermond, 
1859 George McNair, 
1861 William R. McNeil, 

1857 Cora Osborne, 
1861 C. H. Pardoe, 

1858 John M. Perry, 
1864 Thomas E. Philips, 
1863 Edwin H. Ranney, 
1850 John Q. A. Rohrer, 

1863 William H. Runyon, 
1858 A. F. Shanafelt, 

1864 Thomas M. Shanafelt, 

1865 Thomas Seyse, 

1866 Ross Ward, 

1867 Joseph L. Watson, 

1 868 William Winterbottom. 




William Shadrach, D.D. 

Curator, 1846-1849 and 1874-1878. Trustee, 1849-1871 and 1879-1890. Chairman, 1879-1882. 



^Degrees. 



The University is empowered to grant to its students and to others 
deemed worthy, such degrees in the liberal arts and sciences as are usually 
granted in other Universities. 

The number of graduates from the College is 520, of whom 76 are 
deceased. Of the graduates from the Theological Department, there were 
16 who had not graduated from either of the other courses of study. 

The number of Honorary Degrees thus far conferred is 163, as follows : 

Master of Arts, 67 

Doctor of Philosophy, 17 

Doctor of Divinity, 60 

Doctor of Civil Law, I 

Doctor of Laws, 17 

Doctor of Music, 1 

LIST OF HONORARY DEGREES CONFERRED BY 
BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY. 



Doctor of Xaws. 



When 
Conferred. 

1856 Thomas Henry Burrows, 

1857 Howard Malcom, D. D., 
1859 David Jayne, M. D., 

1865 Simon Cameron, 

1866 Henry Miller Pierce, 

1867 Jacob Curtis Booth, 

1868 William Roberts, 

1872 Prof. A. C. Kendrick, 

1873 Prof. Charles E. Hamlin, 



When 
Conferred. 

1875 Hon. John B. Packer, 

1876 Hon. George F. Miller, 
1879 Rev - George R. Bliss, D. D., 
1882 Rev. G. D. B. Pepper, D. D., 
1884 Prof. J. J. Lewis, 

1888 C. B. Ripley, 

1891 Pres. H. G. Weston, D. D., 

1891 Pres. A. H. Strong, D. D. 



6l 



62 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



Doctor of ft>bUosopb£. 



When 
Conferred. 

1852 E. N. Elliott, 

1853 Thomas U. Walter, 

1853 George Ide Chace, 

1854 John Fries Frazer, 

1854 Justin R. Loomis, 

1855 John Chapman Cresson, 
1857 Rev. George W. Anderson, 
i860 Abraham Cole, M. D., 
1876 Rev. Sidney Dyer, 



When 
Conferred. 

1879 Rev. Francis W. Tustin, 
1884 Prof. George M. Philips, 
1889 Prof. Freeman Loomis, 

1 89 1 William Edwards, 

1892 James H. Morgan, 

1892 John Ballentine, 

1893 Joseph E. Perry, 
1893 Reece W. Perkins. 



Doctor of Civil Xaw. 

1885 Hon. W. B. Hanna. 

Doctor of /Ifcusic. 

1892 Elysee Aviragnet. 



Doctor of Divinity. 



185 1 Rev. Horatio Gates Jones, 


1870 


Rev. 


Edward G. Taylor, 


1852 Rev. John Jenkins, 


1870 


Rev. 


D. J. Yerkes, 


1854 Rev. J. Newton Brown, 


1871 


Rev. 


Isaac Bevan, 


1855 Rev. Edmund Turney, 


1872 


Rev. 


George Frear, 


1856 Rev. Joseph H. Kennard, 


1872 


Rev. 


Daniel Shepardson, 


1856 Rev. Greenleaf S. Webb, 


•873 


Rev. 


William Cathcart, 


1858 Rev. Eugenio Kincaid, 


1873 


Rev. 


Charles Keyser, 


1859 Rev. E. VV. Dickinson, 


1875 


Rev. 


Henry F. Smith, 


i860 Rev. Thomas Winter, 


1875 


Rev. 


Robert Lowry, 


1862 Rev. J. Wheaton Smith, 


1879 


Rev. 


George A. Peltz, 


1863 Rev. James F. Brown, 


1879 


Rev. 


I. C. Wynn, 


1864 Rev. Benjamin Griffith, 


1880 


Rev. 


H. H. Craig, 


1865 Rev. Adie K. Bell, 


1880 


Rev. 


A. J. Rowland, 


1865 Rev. Edgar M. Levy, 


1881 


Rev. 


B. F. Woodburn, 


1865 Rev. Thomas Swaim, 


1882 


Rev. 


B. H. Thomas, 


1866 Rev. John H. Castle, 


1882 


Rev. 


B. D. Thomas, 


1866 Rev. D. Henry Miller, 


1883 


Rev. 


A. D. Hawn, 


1867 Rev. P. S. Henson, 


1883 


Rev. 


J. G. Walker, 


1867 Rev. J. R. Murphy, 


1884 


Rev. 


0. P. Eaches, 


1868 Rev. J. S. Dickerson, 


1884 


Rev. 


George Cooper, 


1869 Rev. George W. Anderson, 


1884 


Rev. 


J. H. Leas, 


1869 Rev. George M. Spratt, 


1886 


Rev. 


T. A. K. Gessler, 


1870 Rev. J. B. Simmons, 


1886 


Rev. 


David Downie, 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



63 



When 
Conferred. 
1887 Rev. 

1887 Rev. 

1888 Rev. 

1888 Rev. 

1889 Rev. 

1890 Rev. 

1891 Rev. 



John Humpstone, 
R. M. Luther, 
T. P. Coulston, 
G. E. Rees, 
J. B. G. Pidge, 
Leroy Stephens, 
William H. Conard. 



When 
Conferred. 
1892 Rev. 

1892 Rev. 

1893 Rev. 

1894 Rev. 

1894 Rev. 

1895 Rev. 
1895 Rev- 



Joseph C. Buchanan, 
John S. James, 
Thomas A. Gill, 
Milton Evans, 
Joseph K. Dixon, 
Howard F. King, 
Francis J. Parry. 



/toaster of Brts. 



1852 John Emlyn Jones, 
1852 Rev. George Kempton, 

1852 Rev. Edgar M. Levy, 

1853 Rev. I. W. Hayhurst, 

1853 Rev. J. A. McKean, 

1854 David Ahl, M. D., 
1854 George Taylor, 
1854 Anson Tucker, 

1854 Rev. Andrew Wiberg, 

1855 Rev. B. B. Hamlin, 

1856 Isaac Peckham, 

1856 Thomas F. Thickstun, 

1857 Rev. George M. Spratt, 
1857 Joel Hendricks, 

1857 Jacob S. Whitman, 

1858 Rev. C. A. Fox, 
1858 J. F. Learning, M. D., 
1858 John Randolph, 

i860 Rev. W. M. Whitehead, 

1 86 1 Rev. Alfred H. Taylor, 

1862 Samuel H. Orwig, 

1864 William Bodenhamer, M. D., 

1864 Rev. P. L. Davies, 

1865 Edwin Haas, 

1865 James T. Lane, 

1866 Joseph Jones, M. D., 
1866 Nathan L. Jones, 

1866 Henry Waters, 

1867 Charles H. Kain, 

1867 George H. Larison, M. D., 

1868 Rev. C. Cornforth, 
1868 0. H. Ostrander, 

1868 Rev. David Spencer, 

1869 William C. Moore, 



1869 Rev. W. H. H. Marsh, 

1870 Rev. George W. Folwell, 

1870 Rev. A. Shadrach, 

187 1 Joseph A. Hagy, M. D., 
187 1 Joseph A. Moore, 
1873 Hiram F. Reed, 

1873 Augustus C. Norris, 
1875 Hon. James Buchanan, 
1875 J- Eugene Reed, 

1875 William Rogers, 

1876 Howard M. Baldridge, 
1876 R. Fruit Crawford, 

1879 Prof. R. H. L. Atkinson, B. S., 

1879 Rev. A. H. Sembower, 

1880 Hiram McGowen, M. D., 

1880 George B. Miller, Esq., 

1 88 1 T. H. Purdy, Esq., 

1881 Hon. W. S. Shallenberger, 
1883 F. M. Higgins, 
1883 Rev. A. J. Bonsall, 

1883 Rev. J. Spinther James, 

1884 J. T. Baker, 

1885 Charles Loos, 
1885 Rev. D. S. Thomas, 

1888 Prin. A. J. Davis, 

1889 Mrs. K. B. Larison, 

1890 J. R. Clausen, M. D., 
1890 E. L. B. Godfrey, M. D., 
1893 Lucy R. Bliss, 

1893 George P. Bible, 

1894 Gen. Lewis Merrill, 

1895 Hon. John B. Warfel, 
1895 Rev. Thomas A. Lloyd. 



2)irector\> of the Hlumni. 



Ministers in Italics. The * indicates deceased ; the year, date of decease. 



* Washington Barnhurst, 1862. 
*John H. Castle, L>.L>., . 1890. 

* Feeder M. Fish,. . . . 1884. 

* George 0. Ide, . . . .1885. 

Virgil M. Blanding, . . Rock Island, 111. 
* David F. Carnahan, . 1895. 
*George Good, 1863. 



185I. 

J. Merrill Linn, , 
John M. Lyons, 
Henry Pomerene, 

1852. 



Lewisburg. 
Richland, N. J. 
2813 N. nth Street, 
Phila. 



George I. McLeod, M. D., 3907 Locust Street, 

Phila. 
*Edward W. Moore, . .1861. 



Andrew J. Hay, .... N. Cramer Hill, N. J. Amos B. Still, Danville. 



*Wm. H. Backus, M. D., . I* 

* James Anderson Kelly, . 1 87 7. 

J. Spencer Kennard, D. ^.Philadelphia. 



1853- 

* Augustus H. Lung, . 
*Asa P. Meylert, M. D. 
Malachi F. Taylor, . . 

1854. 



1885. 
1895. 
Brooklyn, N. Y 



William A. Anderson. 
Charles M. Deitz, 
John M. Finn, . . . 
*Lra Foster, .... 
Robert Lowry, D. D., 



Benjamin Bear, M. D., 
Henry I. Budd, . . 
Joseph G. Burchinal, 
Henry G. Clay, . . 

*James P. Gregg, . . 
Alfred Hayes, . . . . 

64 



Frenchtown, N. J. 
Cain. 
1857. 
Plainfield, N. J. 



Jersey Shore. 

Mt. Holly, N. J. 
. Gans. 

, 522 Walnut Street, 
Phila. 

1864. 
Lewisburg. 



Edwin R. Peckens, . . . Plymouth. 
*Jared H. Peters, .... 1892. 

* Edward G. Taylor, Z>.Z>. 1887. 

* Samuel W. Zeigler, . .1892. 



1855. 



i860. 



^Joseph J. Lane, . . 

*John H. Lukens. 

Charles H. Malcom, D. D„ St. Stephen's Col- 
lege, Annandale, 
N. Y. 

John Ozvens, Pittsburg. 

* Arthur G. Thomas. . . 1886. 




George Maine Strait, D. D. 

Trustee, 1882- 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



6 7 



*Edwin A. Evans, . 
*Lewis K. Evans, . , 
* George Frear, D. D. } 
George YV. Fries, . . . 
John A. Gundy, . . , 



. 1872. 

• I893- 

• 1895. 

. Friendship, N. Y 
. Lewisburg. 



1856. 



W. F. W. Jacobs, .... Boston, Mass. 

Miller Jones, Village Green. 

* Andrew F. Shanajelt, . 1875. 

John R. Shanajelt, . . . Lawrence, Kan. 

*ProJF. W.Tustin,Ph.D.,i^. 



*Robert Chalfant, . . . 1878. 
* George T. McNair, . . 1 889. 
*Harvey W. Mitchell, . 1867. 



1857. 



George A. Pellz, D. &., . 1821 N. 22d St., Phila. 

*/. Q. A. Pohrer, . . . i860. 

J. A. Selser, 834 Ont. St., Phila. 



Thomas Chamberlin, 



Jesse D. Cooper, 
* Robert Dun lap, 
T. H. B.Lewis, 



424 Walnut St., 

Phila. 
Centreville, Ala. 
1885. 
Wilkes-Barre. 



1858. 



*Milton Opp, 1864. 

Elisha Rittenhouse, . . Asbury Park, N. J. 
*Francis H. Westcott, . . 1870. 
* Isaac C. Wynn, D. £>., 1 889. 
*Wm. H. Verkes, . . . 1885. 



R. H. L. Atkinson, . 
O. P. Chamberlin, . 



1859. 

534 Penn St., Cam- Wm. H. Finn, M. D., . 627 N. 10th St., 

den, N. J. Phila. 

Flemington, N. J. A. J. Furman, Chadd's Ford. 



Thos. P. Coulston, D. D., Frankford, Phila. 



A. D. Hawn, D. D., . . Delaware, Ohio. 



i860. 

James Chamberlin, LL.B., Nashville, Tenn. William A. Marr, . . .Ashland. 

C. V. Gundy, Lewisburg. William L. Nesbit, . . . Lewisburg. 

James H.Marr, . . . 2114 E. Cumberland George R. Spratt, M. D., Coatesville. 

St., Phila. Simon P. Wolverton, . . Sunbury. 



1 86l. 

William H. Harrison, . . 23d and Cherry Sts., T. M. Shanajelt, D. D., Huron, South Dak. 

Cresswell Iron Joseph Smith, .... Gibbon, Neb. 

Works, Phila. O. W. Spratt, LL. B., . 1420 Chestnut St., 
1881. Phila. 

1881. Joseph K. Weaver, M. D., Norristown. 



* William H. Runyon, 

* David Ruth. . . . 



68 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



1862. 



William H. Beck, . . . 1424 New York 

Ave., N. W., 
Wash'n, D. C. 

Henry Bray, Wissahickon, Phila. 

Wm. H Conard, D. D., 1420 Chestnut St., 

Phila. 

Thomas R. Jones, LL. B., National Safe De- 
posit Co., Wash- 
ington, D. C. 



D. Bright Miller, . 
David M. Nesbit, 



. Lewisburg. 
. College Station, 
Md. 
^Thomas R. Orwig, . . 1862. 
A. J. Rowland, D. D., . 1420 Chestnut St., 

Phila. 
* Andrew G. Tucker, . . 1863. 
Jacob G. Walker, D. D., 649 N. 40th St., 

Phila. 



1863. 



George Bowman, .... Anacostia, D. C. 
W. W. Case, West Hoboken, 

N.J. 

Asher Cook, Middle Grove, N. Y. W. W. Winter, 

Owen P. Eachcs, D. D., . Hightstown, N. J. 
Henry F. Grier, . . . .57 Congress St., 

Chicago, 111. 



David P. Leas, .... 400 S. 40th St., Phila. 
Henry C. Munro, .... White Hall. 
* Rev. Joseph P. Ttistin, . 1 892. 

. . . 106 Bringhurst St., 
Germantown. 
*Henry II. Witmer, . . 1864. 
William J. Wolverton, . Lock Haven. 



1864. 



William F. Cowden, 



. 812 " M " St., Ta- *John C. Hyde, . . . 

coma, Wash. *C. B. Ripley, LL. D., 

T. A. K. Gessler, D. D., . Jig St. Nicholas St., Shaw Loo, ALL)., . . 

New York. Charles A. Stone, . . . 

J. G. Hornet, Monroetown. Robert Townsend, . . 

John B. Hittton, . . . . 451 S. Normal Park- *Wm. G. VanZant, M. D., 1874. 

way, Chicago, 111. Ross Ward, Morgantown, W. Va. 



1884. 

1893. 

Maulmein, Burma. 

Richburg, N. Y. 

Reading. 



1865. 

Theophilns E.Clapp,D.D., Portland, Oregon. Edward E. Jones, . . . Clinton, N. J. 

Henry B. Fowler, C. E., . 436 Walnut St., Phila. Howard F. King, D. D., Uniontown. 
HB. Garner, . . . . Downingtown. C. B. Lowe, M. D., . . . 1 125 Mt. Vernon St., 

Thomas A. Gill, D. D., Phila. 

U. S. AT. Hackensack, N. J. John B. Probasco, M. D., Plainfield, N. J. 



1866. 

Henry J. Ely, Atlantic Highlands, Freeman Loomis, Ph. D., Lewisburg. 

N. J. John A. Siner, LL. B., . 836 N. Broad St., 
Pittston. Phila. 

1870. Thomas E. Smith, . . . Ypsilanti, Mich. 

Seattle, Wash. ^Alfred Taylor, LL. B., . 1895. 

Allegheny. *Charles S. Wolfe. . . . 1891. 



N. C. Giddings, M. D 

* George C. Hall, . . 
Alonzo Hull, ... 

John S. LLutson, . . 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



69 



William Barrows, 
Arthur D. Dean, . 
William C. Grier, 
*George H. Irwin, 
David M. Jones, . 
Elias S. Lear, 
* Charles Marks, . 



Oxford. 

Scranton. 

Milford, Mich. 

1894. 

Wilkes-Barre. 

Burlingame, Kan. 

1892. 



1867. 

Webster R. Maul, . . 

E. H. Painter, . . . . 

* Lemuel D. Pawling, . 

Thomas J. Philips, . . 

David E. Rue, . . . . 

E. M. Tomlinson, . . 

Joseph L. Watson, . . 



. Brooklyn, N. Y. 

. Muncy. 

. 1876. 

. Atglen. 

. Hoboken, N. J. • 

. Alfred Centre, N. Y. 

. Mount Olive, N. J. 



John W. Gosorn, .... Concord. 

John Sexton James, D.D., 1420 Chestnut St., 

Phil a. 
*Prin. Jonathan Jones, . 1882. 
Franklin Matthews, M.D., 1720 N. 22d St., 

Phila. 



Charles H. Anderson, . 

Francis M. Baker, . . 

Martin Bell, 

George W. Bliss, . . . 
F. E. Bower, .... 
George J. Brensinger, . 

Joseph W. Crawford, . 



Lemuel Amerman, . . 
Henry H. Bliss, LL. B., 



1868. 

John W. Poler, . . . 

Joseph Sergeant, . . . 
Leroy Stephens, D. D., 



. 1 6 19 Montgomery 

Ave., Phila. 
. Flemington, N. J. 
. Lewisburg. 



1869. 



1 31 8 Chestnut St., 

Phila. 
Dauphin. 
Ffollidaysburg. 
Chester. 
Middleburg. 
2530 Columbia Ave. 

Phila. 
2012 N. 21st St., 

Phila. 

Scranton. 

925 French, N. W., 
Wash.. D. C. 



F. K. Fowler, . . . 
John H. Harris, LL. D 
Andrew A. Leiser, . 
Albert Schooley, . . 
William H. Shermer, 
David G. Sturdevant, 
Edmund Wells, . . 
John S. Wrightnour, 



187O. 

Charles T. Ha How ell, 
"^George S. Matlack, 
Charles K. Middleton, 



Olean, N. Y. 
Lewisburg. 
Lewisburg. 
Chehalis, Wash. 
Elizabeth, N. J. 
Gibbon, Neb. 
Charleston, S. C. 
Lincoln, 111. 



Park Rapids, Minn. 

1893. 

Camden, N. J. 



187I 



George Ballentine, . 
*Joseph K. Bogert, . 
Henry Cole lesser, . . 
* Jacob 7. Elwell, 
Thomas R. Evans, . 
*Prof. W. T. Grier, . 
Henry S. Hickman, . 
William S. Holt, . . 
John Humpstone, D. D., 



Reidsburg. 
1887. 

Conshohocken. 
1888. 

Iowa City, Iowa. 
1884. 

West Chester. 
Karthaus. 
291 Ryerson St., 
Brooklyn, N. Y. 



Charles Jones, . . 
G. N. Le Fevre, . 
Frank S. Marr, . . 
William E. Martin, 
J. J. Nicholas, . . 
William R. Patton, 
G.M Philips, Ph.D., 
James Rainey, . . . 
* Benjamin F. Robb, 
William F. Schooley, 



Nanticoke. 

Lancaster. 

Germantown. 

Lewisburg. 

Oakland, Cal. 

Media. 

West Chester. 

Laceyville. 

1889. 

Allenwood. 



7o 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



1872. 



John Ballentine, Ph. D 
W. C. Bartol, Ph. D., . 
F. Bertolette, .... 
J. H. Chambers, . . . 
T. M. Eastwood, . . . 
*Aaron W. Eyre, M. D., 
S. F. Forgeus, . . «. . 
Albert Foster, D. D., . 
J, H. Grater, .... 



Edwin E. James, M. D. 
Rolandus Kocher, . . 



,, Clarion. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Mauch Chunk. 
. West Chester. 
. Albany, N. Y. 
. 1895. 

. Huntingdon. 
. Newark, N. J. 
. 627 Walnut St., 

Phila. 
. Cascade, Mont. 
. Fowlerville. 



William Leiser, M. D., 
W. H. Mentzer, . . . 
^George Ogden, Jr., 
F.J. Parry, D. D., . 

R. W. Perkins, Ph. D. 
J. H. Pomeroy, . . . 
George M. Righter, . . 
W. O. Shaffer, .... 
George Whitman, . . 

John H. Wingert, . . 



. Lewisburg. 

. Tunkhannock. 

. 1892. 

. 178 Alexander Ave., 

New York. 
. Lock Haven. 
. Shenandoah. 
. Roxboro, Phila. 
. Lewisburg. 
• 334 S. Division St., 

Buffalo, N. Y. 
. Lewisburg. 



1873- 



J. W. Allen, . 
*Edzvin C. Baird. 
John B. Cook, . 
*W. F. Derr, . 
John W. Hague, 
R. A. Kennedy, M. D., 
*S. D. McDonald, . . 



Lake City, Iowa. 

1887. 

Greeley, Colo. 

1886. 

Pittsburg. 

Shamokin. 

1886. 



N. P. Mervine, . . . 
William B. Ridenour, 

Daniel W. Sheppard, 
Freeman G. Teed, . 
William C. Walls, . 
E. B. Walts. . . . 



1874. 

Alfred C. Knowlton, 



Bernard MacMackin. 



Ward R. Bliss, .... Chester. 

C. C. Hazen, Beaver. 

Pres. David J. Frill, LL.D., 

Rochester, N. Y. 
W. C. Hollopeter, M. D., 1428 N. Broad St., Edward M. Ogden, . . 

Phila. ^Benjamin H. Yerkes, 



Altoona. 

270 Stuyvesant St., 

Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Southampton. 
Los Angeles, Cal. 
Lewisburg. 
730 Edwin St., Wil- 

liamsport. 



216 Sumac St., Wis- 
sahickon, Phila. 

1420 Chestnut St., 
Phila. 

Chesterfield, N. J. 

1883. 



1875. 



E. M. Brazoley, D. D., . 

Thomas Crea, 

* James O. Critchlow, . . 
John F. Duncan, . . . . 
William H. Ellis, . . . 
Robert D. Evans, . . . . 
*Wilfred Gerhart, M. D., 
T. E. Halfpenny, . . . 

J. W. Higbee, 

D. P. Higgins, 

Thomas W. Hoskinson, . 



Petersburg, Va. 

Sharpsburg. 

1889. 

Lewisburg. 

Jersey Shore. 

Wilkes-Barre. 

1890. 

Lewisburg. 

Castle Shannon. 

Lewisburg. 

706 Walnut St., Phila. 



Charles R. James, . . 

F. M. Kelly, 

George H. McClelland, 
George W. Means, . . 
* William H. Paallin, . 
Joseph M. Ray, . . . 
L. M. Roberts, .... 
J. F. Strieby, .... 
Cyrus Trego, M. D. 
T. K. VanDyke, . . . 
John B. Weston, M. D., 



Allentown. 
Parsons, W. Va. 
Duluth, Minn. 
Brookville. 
1884. 

Wilkinsburg. 
Glynceiriog, Wales. 
Williamsport. 
Pottstown. 
Harrisburg. 
Duluth, Minn. 




Henry G. Weston, D. D., LL. D. 

Curator, 1868-1882. Chancellor, 1871-1876. Trustee, 1882- 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



73 



Alex. S. Bastian, 
John Brooks, 



1876. 



Thomas H. Chapman, 



Levi H. Copeland, . 



. Hamburg, N. J. 

. 711 N. 43d St., 
Phila. 

. Ellsworth Ave. and 
Graham St., Pitts- 
burg. 

. Skowhegan, Maine. 



Lewis Cass Davis, . . . Allenwood. 

* Theodore Henderson, . . 1 894. 

Owen James, D. D., . . Nashville, Tenn. 

P. N.K. Schwenk, M.D., 827 N. 7th St., Phila. 

John N. Shanafelt, . . . Chester. 

Albert B. Stewart, . . . Lewisburg. 

Harry S. Stvartz. . . . Boonville, N. Y. 



1877. 



Thomas J. Collins, . 
Eugene Emly, . . . 



William R. Follmer, 
Calvin A. Hare, . . 
Harry M. Lowry, . 
George A. Marr, . . 

Harold M. McClure, 



216 S. " 8 " St., Salt 
Lake City, Utah, 

119 Washington St., 
Paterson, N. J. 

Lewisburg. 

Indianapolis, Ind. 

Rahway, N. J. 

3326 N. Broad St., 
Phila. 

Lewisburg. 



Thomas P. Morgan, 

*William L. Penny, 
William E. Phillips, 
Edmund H. Reppert, 

Edmund D. Shull, . 
George T Street, 

Edwin T. Trimble, 
Charles J. Wolf, . . 



Whitney's Point, 

N. Y. 
1882. 
Abrams. 
Uniontown. 
Vincentown, N. J. 
Cowan St., 32d 

Ward, Pittsburg. 
Colfax, Wash. 
Lewisburg. 



D. A. Blose, . . . 
L. M. Boyer, . . 
Frank N. English, 
James Fielding, 
James E. Frear, . 
William K. Lord, 



* Frank S. Davis, . . 
Daniel W. Griffith, . 
John H. Groff, M. D., 
Elisha G. Harvey, . 



Frank H Cooper, 
*David H. Evans, . 
Henry A. Griesemer, 
Wilmot J. Hunter, . 
Thomas L. Lewis, . 
* Thomas W. Mason. 



Tonica, 111. 
Winchester, Va. 
Colfax, Wash. 
Dalton. 

Tunkhannock. 
1806 N. 24th St., 
Phila. 



1885. 

Shenandoah, Iowa. 
Argos, Ind. 
Lewisburg. 



1878. 

H. O. Newcomb, . . . 

George E. Nichols, . . 
Joseph E. Perry, Ph. D., 
L. L. Shearer, . . . 
B. H. Thomas, Jr., . . 



. Millville, N. J. 
. Holyoke, Mass. 
. Hightstown, N. J 
Weiser, Idat-o. 
. Cleveland, O. 



Frank W. Westcott, M. D., Fanwood, N. J. 



1879. 



Binghamton, N. Y. 

1881. 

Haddonfield, N. J. 

Quakertown. 

2549 Neff St., Phila. 

1881. 



Abner J. Irey, . . 
Charles L. Penny, 
Earl Milo Purdy, . 



1880. 

Wm. G. Owens, . . . 
James M. Plannett, . . 
* Albert J. Shoemaker, . 
Henry M. IVolJ, Jr., . 
S. Lewis Ziegler, M. D., 



Warren. 
Newark, Del. 
Atlanta, Ga. 



Lewisburg. 
Stoneboro. 
1886. 

Waterford, Conn. 
1504 Walnut St., 
Phila. 



74 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



Edward B. Cornell, . . Dundee, N. Y. 
Francis W. Kramer, . . Library. 
Wm. Frear, Ph. D., . . . State College. 



I88l. 



Frank H. Shermer f 
Herbert F. StilwelL 



. Jeanette. 

. Minneapolis, Minn. 



W. M. Datesman, . . . 21 W. 31st St., New 

York. 
Prof. Milton G. Evans, D. D., 

Chester. 
H C. Hall, Erie. 

A. H. Beaver, Saginaw, Mich. 

J. F. Carey, Jr., .... Hammond, Ind. 
William J. Coulston, . . Washington C. H., 

Ohio. 
William M. Driesbach, . Lewisburg. 
Spencer B. Meeser, . . . Worcester, Mass. 
J. C. Nissley, Esq., . . . Harrisburg. 

A. W. Puller, Somerset, Ky. 

Clarence E. Sprout, . . . Williamsport. 



1882. 

*H. J. Hamilton, . 
R. M. Hunsicker, 
J. A. Jenkins, . . 
Henry Madtes, . . 



Howard H. Baldrige, 
Jacob E. Davies, . . 
Cyrenus A. Gardner, 
Frank M. Goodchild, 

Aaron W. Hand, 
John A. Hornberger, 



Omaha, Neb. 
Plymouth. 
Toledo, Ohio. 
219 W. 43d St., 

New York. 
Keene, N. H. 
Pekin, 111. 



John S. Thomas, . 

1883. 

Charles E. Stein, . . 
William C. Summers, 

O. R. Thomas, . . . 
A. L. Tustin, . . . 
Morgan J. Wat kins, 
William G. Watkins* 



Elmer E. Wolf 



1884. 



George P. Miller, C. E., 
Fred W. Overheiser, . 
Milton W. Shreve, . . 
Owen M. Shreve, M.D., 

Marshall G. Smith . . 
Ernest L. Tustin. . . . 



Franklin P. Lynch, M. D., Mukimvina, Congo, 

Loando, S. W. 
Africa. 



1 891. 

Chestnut Hill, Phila. 
Livingston, Mont. 
Cleveland, O. 
Wilkes -Barre. 



Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Transfer. 

Bloomsburg. 

Factoryville. 

116 Theodore St., 

Scranton. 
Ft. Edward, N. Y. 



. Taos, New Mexico. 
. Cold Spring, N. Y. 
. Union City. 
3 New Oxford St., 
London, Eng. 
. Towanda. 
904 Betz Building, 
Phila. 



1885. 

Samuel Z. Batten, . . . Morristown, N. J. James Israel, Pittsburg. 

William P. Beaver, . . . New Kensington. William L. Kurtz, . . . Lewisburg. 

Samuel Bolton, Jr., M. D., 4515 Paul St., Frank- Carl C. Law, 113 S. 37th St., Phila. 

ford, Phila. S. G. Reading, Williamsport. 

John P. Currin, . . . . Hillsboro, Ohio. Joseph E.Sagebeer,~Ph.~D.,F\eming\.on, N. J. 

William R. Granger, . . Raleigh, N. C. Chella Scott (Beale), . . Scranton. 

J. M. Hare, Burlington, N. J. Ralph M. Strawbridge, . Lewisburg. 

Chas. W. Hermann, . . Middleburg. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



75 



1886. 



Hiram G. Driesbach, 
Charges B. Fun nan, 
Edward A. Johnson, 
George F. Keefer, 
Elmer E. Keiser, M. D 
William W. Kelchner, 
Charles R. Kurtz, . . 



Lewisburg. 

Philadelphia. 

Bangor. 

Sunbury. 

Tacony, Phila. 

Williamsport. 

Bellefonte. 



William A. Lewis, . 
Ira D. Mallery, 
Samuel S. Merriman, 
Albert W. Pegues, . 
William A. Shipman, 
William C. St in son, 
Lincoln S. Walter, 



. Rutherford, N. J. 
. Cherryville, N. J. 
. Trenton, N. J. 
. Raleigh, N. C. 
. Sunbury. 
. Providence, R. I. 
. Mt. Carmel. 



Howard L. Calder, 
*James B. Cawley, .. . 
George F. Clark, M. D., 
Justin L. Van Gundy, . 
Walter S. Harley, . . 

Miles O. Noll, Carlisle 

*John G. Owens, . .... 1893. 
Edwin Paul, Milton. 



Harrisburg. 
1891. 

Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Norristown. 
Reading. 



1887. 

Thomas H. Rowe, . . . Homestead. 
Frances M. Rush (Dee- 
don!), Bordentown, N. J. 

Mary R. Y. Schreyer, . . Milton. 
Daniel W. Shipman, Esq., Shamokin. 
William E. Staub, . . . Elizabeth, N. J. 
J. W. A. Young, Ph. D., . University of Chi- 
cago, 111. 



1888. 



A. B. Bowser, . . . 
James S. Braker, 
William H. Clipman, 
John W. Griffith, . 
George W. Hatch, . 
W. V. Hayes, M. D., 



*Reuben C. Hollenbaugh, 
Lincoln Hulley, Ph. Z\, . 
Daniel M. Jones, . . . 



Harry M. Kelly, 



Danville. 

Scotch Plains, N. J. 

Harrisburg. 

Edmeston, N. Y. 

Chester. 

175 E. 68th St., 

New York. 
1893. 

Lewisburg. 
1 601 Passyunk Ave., 

Phila. 
Mt. Vernon, Iowa. 



Robert B. McDanel, . . 
Prof. John D. Minick, . . 
Oliver K.Pellman,D.D.S., 
J. P. Pontius, M. D., . . 

*Milton C. Reinhold, . . 
John Y. Schreyer, 
Frederick H. Senft, . . . 

Charles A. Soars, . . . . 
W. M. Woodward, M. D., 



Oak Lane, Phila. 
Lenoir, N. C. 
Mifflinburg. 
1629 Chestnut St., 

Phila. 
1894. 
Milton. 
909 N. 15th St., 

Phila. 
Nicetown. 
McKeesport. 



1889. 



O. E. Abraham, . 

Joseph M. Ashton, 
Thomas W. Booth, 
Oliver B. Finn . . 



Wm. C. Gretzinger, 
Edwin H. Guie, . 
Frank B. Hargrave, 



15 Wall St., New 

York. 
Cramer Hill, N. J. 
Columbus, O. 
62/ North Tenth St., 

Phila. 
Lewisburg. 
Seattle, Wash. 
Greensburg. 



William C. Leinbach, 
Thomas Quintin, . . 
Jesse O. Shipman, . 
Charles A. Walker, . 
Raymond West, . . 

Joseph M. Wolfe, . 
W. E. Zeller, . . . 



. Reading. 

. Olyphant. 

. Shamokin. 

. Bell wood. 

.1121 Sommerville 

St., Phila. 
. State College. 
. Vineland, N J. 



7 6 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



Wm. M. Courson, . 

*William Farrow, Jr. 

J. Harry Haslam, . 

Willard C. McNaul, 



Eagleville. 

1895. 

Norristown. 
895 Walnut St., 
Chicago. 



189O. 

Richard L. Schroyer, 
Eveline J. Stanton, . 
John I. Woodruff, 

Joseph S. Young, . . 



Selinsgrove. 
Edinboro. 
Selinsgrove. 
i8 9 3- 



R. C. H. Catterall,Ph.D 

Charles Campbell, M. D. 

Robert B. Dunmire, 
Herbert C. Donat, . . 

Geo. E. Fisher, . . . 
John T. Hyatt, .... 
H. W. D. Kirkendall, . 
Claudius G. Langford, 



, University of Chi- 
cago, 111. 

„ 1248 S. 10th St., 
Phila. 

. Wrangle, Alaska. 

. 1949 N. 6th St., 
Phila. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Santiago de Cuba. 

. Saltsburg. 

. Hilltown. 



1 89I. 

Jacob H. Minickj . . . Orrstown. 

A. Lincoln Moore, . . . 1 948 Stella Ave., 

Phila. 

Margaret Evans (Mac- 
Caiman), 625 County St., 

New Bedford, 
Mass. 

Foster H. Stark ey, . . .213 Arch St., Mar- 
quette, Mich. 

Almon 0. Stevens, . . . Rochester, Minn. 

Paul Tustin, .... Williamsport. 



1892. 



Charles W. Allen, . . 
Isaac F. Bodle, . . . 
*Annie C. Carlisle, . . 
Elton S. Corson, M. D., 

Homer Dowlin, . . . 
Charles E. Folmer, . . 
Robert J. Holmes, . . 
Elkanah Hulley, . . . 
Warren L. Kauffman, . 
Charles Koonce, . . . 



. St. Ann's, 111. 

. South Eaton. 

. 1893. 

. Polyclinic Hospital, 

Phila 
. Minneapolis, Minn. 
. Orwigsburg. 
. Atglen. 
. Factoryville. 
. Harrisburg. 
. Youngstown, O. 



Willard A. Laning, , 
James M. Paterson, 
Walter B. Pimm, 
Llewellyn Phillips, , 
Charles G. Shaffer, , 
George Shorkley, . 
H. Ophelia Staufft, . 
George W. Wagenseller, 
John U. Wagner, . . . . 
Andrew R. E. Wyant, 



Rural Retreat, Va. 
Evans City. 
Babylon, L. I. 
Lewisburg. 
Opelousas, La. 
Lewisburg. 
Wheaton, 111. 
Middleburg. 
Scranton. 
Morgan Park, 111. 



Nellie W. Conard, . . Philadelphia. 
John B. Cressinger, M. D., Sunbury. 
John H. Foresman, . . . Williamsport. 
Arthur F. Gardner, . . . Factoryville. 
Carrie L. Geary, .... Carbondale. 
Charles A. Gundy, M. D., Lewisburg. 



1893. 



Ephraim M. Heim, . . . Univ. of Chicago, 111. 
Carrie V. Lloyd, .... Phcenixville. 

Edwin Maxey, Palmyra, Mo. 

Edward Clayton Pauling, Korea. 
Eugenio K. Thomas, . . Montrose. 
W. Clarence Weber, . . Sunbury. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



77 



1894. 



Andrew F. Anderson, 

Mary L. Bartol, . 
Eliza Bell, . . . 
Everett A. Bush, . 
Perry S. Calvin, 
Robert B. Davidson, 
Raymond J. Davis, 
George E. Deppen, 
Harvey L. Fassett, 
Albert E. Finn, . 
Thomas S. Ftetz, . 
Howard P. Gundy, 
Grace Guthrie, . . 
Mary B. Harris, . 
James R. Hughes, 

Gilbert F. Kendall, 



in B. St., S. E., 
Washington, D. C. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Panama, N. Y. 

Univ. of Chicago, 111. 

Univ. of Chicago, 111. 

Madras, Ind. 

Sunbury. 

Hightstown, N. J. 

Chester. 

Beverly, N. J. 

Lewisburg. 

Pottsville. 

Lewisburg. 

149 Rebecca St., 
Scranton. 

62 Lake Place, New 
Haven, Conn. 



James M. Kendall, . . . 

Alonzo Corodj'u Lathrop, 
Charles F. McMann, . . 

Warren Marts, 

Levi L. Riggin, . . . . 
Frederick Otto Schub, 



Franklin R. Strayer, 
Harvey F. Smith, 
Ralph R. Snow, . . 
Wilson M. Vastine, . 
George H. WaiH, . . 
Jessie J. Wheeler. 
Charles W. Williams, 
Joseph R. Wood, . . 
Albert H. Wynkoop, 



62 Lake Place, New 
Haven, Conn. 

Everett. 

Lancaster. 

Pennsburg, Pa. 

Bridgeton, N. J. 

Theological Semi- 
nary, Rochester, 
N. Y. 

Reading. 

Harrisburg. 

Univ. of Chicago, 111. 

Riverside. 

Chester. 

Lewisburg. 

Chester. 

Chester. 

Chester 



1895. 



Ezra Allen, . . . 
Benjamin K. Brick, 
Joseph C. Carey, . 
William H. Carey, 
Minnie Cotton (Calvin), 

William A. Crawford, 
Peter B. Cregar, . . 
Nelson F. Davis . . 
Thomas C. //anna, . 
William T //arris, 

Frank W. Jackson, . . 
William A. Kauffman, 



Coudersport. 
Marlton, N. J. 
Glen Loch. 
Glen Loch. 
University of 

Chicago, 111. 
De Lancey. 
Annandale, N. J. 
Bridg< ton, N. J. 
Plantsville, Conn. 
5812 Ashland, Ave., 

Phila. 
Mount Pleasant. 
Bordentown, N. J. 



Andrew G. Loomis, . . Lewisburg. 
Kate I. McLaughlin, . . Lewisburg. 
William T. Paullin, Jr., . Chester. 
Herbert M. Pease, . . . Eaton. 
Cora R. Perry, Y. W. C. A. 



Scranton. 
David Phillips, .... Plymouth. 
L G. C. Riemer, .... Lewisburg. 
Herbert S. Schuyler, . . Kutztown. 
William B. Sheddan, . . Pottsgrove. 
Franklin I. Sigmund, . . Chester. 
Frank M. Simpson, . . . Clifford. 
Bromley Smith, .... Factoryville. 
Benjamin M. Wagenseller, Milton. 



Directory of the Matriculates. 



A list of those who were matriculated in the College, but who did not 
finish the course. 

Ministers in italics ; the * indicates deceased ; the year, date of de- 
cease. 



*John K. Taggart. 

*Mark R. Watkinson, . 1877. 



1851 



Joseph A. Rhoades, . . . Lock Haven. 

S.H.Wilson, 531 Pine Street, Wil- 

liamsport. 



1852. 

W. H. Armstrong, . . . Easton. *J. T. Lane, 

John A. Grier, . . . . .358 Maple Street, *J. W. Ricketts. 

Englewood, 111. 



C. C. Bitting, D. D., 

*George W. Cresswell. 
* Andrew D. Elder. 
Joseph N. Folwell, . 



1853- 



1420 Chestnut St., 


Andrew W. Gregg, . 


. . Milesburg. 


Phila. 


Franklin H. Lane, . 


. , Huntingdon 






. . 1896. 




*Francis Taggart. 




Camden, N. J. 







Francis P. Beck. 
^Milton S. Benson. 
*0. T. Beidleman. 
William J. Coxey, . 
Henry C. Ford, . . 
Benjamin L. Forster, 
Edward A. Green, . 
David McM. Gregg, 

78 



1854. 

Henry Johnson, .... Reading. 

Joseph E. Jones, Jr., M.D., West Chester. 

Thomas H. McCormick. 
Camden, N. J. *Mordecai T. Ruth. 
1823 Vine St., Phila. Daniel K. Sterrett. 
Harrisburg. A. B. Stewart, M. D., . . Minn. 
Mill Creek. Jared C. Warner. 
Reading. O. S. Wood, M. D Omaha, Neb. 





Stephen W. Taylor, LL.D. 

Acting President, 1846-1851. Professor of Mathematics, 1848-1851. 



Memorials of Bucknell University 



81 



1855. 



William A. Barnes, . 
*Phineas M. Barber, . 
S. S. Black well. 
Jacob H. Brown, . . . 
*Isaac G. Brown, . . 
Job Browning, .... 
Isaiah Clowes, .... 
Jacob M. Funs. 
Daniel W. Hand, M. D. 
Moses Heath, .... 
Charles F. Henderson. 
David Heron, Jr., . . 
Samuel F. Hoffa, . . . 



Connellsville. 


*Charles T. Huston. 




1891. 




. New York City. 




Thomas Lowther, . .. 


. Altoona. 


Wichita, Kansas. 


*J. G. McMeen. 




1855. 


Benjamin F. Owen, . . 


. Reading. 


Philadelphia. 


Abijah Rittenhouse, 


. Flemington, N. J. 


Allegheny. 


Azariah Shadrach, . . 
*John L. Smith. 


. Dixonville. 


Minneapolis, Minn. 


Charles J. Thompson, . 


. Peoria, 111. 


Wilmington, Del. 


Addison S. Vanderslice, 


. Phoenix ville. 




A. B. Vorse, ..... 


. Wellesley Hills, Mass 


Beech Creek. 


John N. Walker, M. D., 


. Philadelphia. 


Milton. 


*T. P. White. 





1856. 



Robert Atkinson, .... Ottawa, Kan. 
Hugh B. Brisbin, . . . . " Press," Phila. 
Samuel D. Beecroft. 

Cyrus Bruner, Columbia. 

W. H. Collins, ...... Camden, N. J. 

Charles Cook. 

*John P. Cronmiller. 

Samuel C. Dare, .... Norristown. 

B. F. Deal, Bainsburg. 

*J. P. Driver. 

*John Dowling, Jr., M. D. 

H. L. Freas, Scranton. 

Nathan Fowler. 

John C. Fruit, M. D., . . Bloomsburg. 

Dr. Francis P. Green, . . Bellefonte. 

Robert G. Henderson. 

* Joseph A. Hagy, M. D., 1894. 

Horatio D. Hunter, . . . White Deer. 

Jno. S. Jenkins, .... Lansdale. 

C. C. Kemble, Harrisburg, Pa. 

Mahlon R. Lair. 



Moses E. Leitzel. 




^Charles Marr. 




J. Dayton Merrill, . 


. Marion, N. Y. 


C. G. McLaughlin, M. ] 


D., Philadelphia. 


*Jerome B. Morse. 




*Henry Myers. 




B. F. Newlin. 




*John B. Norton. 








*Samuel U. Pott, . . 


. i860. 


*George N. Reutter, 


. 1890. 


*Thomas K. Reutter, 


• 1863. 






*M. M. Strickler, . . 


. 1878. 


Thomas. H. Tomlinso 


n, M.D., 




Plainfield, N. J 


Albert Warfel, . . . 




John B. Warfel, . . 


. Lancaster. 


Piatt Wicks. 




John E. Wilson. 





1857. 



William S. Allen. 




John G. Foster, . . . 


. Columbia. 


J. Alfred Barton. 




Thomas C. Gessford, . 


. Stewartstown. 


John T. Bell. 




Martin Guyer. 




D. Webster Bland, M.D. 


, Pottsville. 


Robert F. Hayes . . . 


. Freeport, 111. 


Alfred Delaney. 




Benjamin Hursh, . . . 


. Lancaster, Kansas 


Alexander Dysart . . 


Tipton. 


^Joseph J. Lane. 




*James H. Eldredge, . . 

6 


1878-79. 


Restore G. Lippincott. 





82 



Memorials of Bucknell University 



S. C. McCormick,M. D., . Duluth, Minn. 

^William H. Moore. 

*Isaac T. Peckens, . . . 1891. 

R. L. W. Probasco, . . . Huron, Kansas. 

*William H. Richter. 



John P. Bell, Sabbath Rest. 

*Wm. Cameron. 

C. G. M. Griffith. 

Martin M. King, . . . Bellefonte, Mo. 

Edward L. Koons, . . . Conyngham. 

Granville Malcom, M. D., Denver, Col. 



* Thomas Blackburn. 
*Thomas F. Budd. 
R. F. Crawford, . . 
*Sarauel L. Cox. 
William E. Comzvell, Jr., Jacobstown, N. J. 



Santa Rosa, Cal. 



Jno, W. Evans, . . 
Elhanan Fisher, . . 
*L. K. Hayhurst. 
*John Ireland. 
H. B. Johnson. 
*Benjamin E. Jones, 
Isaac C. Jones. 
Oliver B. Leonard, . 
Wm. F. Lippincott. 



Dividing Creek, N. J. 
Mt. Carroll. 111. 



1895. 
Plainfield, N. J. 



Dewitt C. Taylor, . . 
*T. Brantley Williams, 
* James D. Wilson, . . 
Edwin C. Wolfe, . . . 

1858. 

J. Brown McLaughlin, 
Henry S. Ogden, . . . 
T. H. Purdy, . . . . 
*J. K. Stauffer, . . . . 
Samuel Stille. 

1859. 

Wm. C. Montgomery. 
Wm. Noetling, .... 
Cora Osborn, . . . . 
John A. Owens, . . . 
John M. Perry, . . . 
Theodore Richmond, . 
John M. Reynolds. 
*Isaac M. Ruth. 
*Israel B. Seabold. 
^Francis S. Seiler, . . 
Charles B. Thompson. 
Frank Wilson, M. D., . 
Thomas H. Wilson, 
David Ward Wood, 



Tyrone. 
1856. 
1889. 
Pottsgrove. 



Lewisburg. 
Greenwich, N. J. 
Sunbury. 
1861. 



Bloomsburg. 

Westfield, N. J. 
Lewisburg. 
Virginia. 
Chattanooga, Tenn. 



1879. 

East Toledo, Ohio. 
Washington, D. C. 
Chicago. 



i860. 



*Richard M. Bell, . . 


. 1864. 


William C. Caldwell, . 


. Sunbury. 


Franklin C. Derr, . . . 


. Danville. 


*Isaac DeHaven. 




George W. Fohvell, . . 


. 1506 Morris St., 




Phila. 


^Charles R. Evans. 




B. S. Fahnestock, . . 


. Pittsburg. 


Benjamin H. Fish, . . 


. McKeesport. 


Clarence Ge tides, . . . 


. Astoria, L. I., N, 


P. B. Kinports, . . . 


. Grant. 


M. W. McAlarney, . . 


. Harrisburg. 


L. H. Nice, 





William T. Johnson, 
Arthur Malcom, . . 
*John A. Morris. 
Edward A. Smith. 



Washington, D. C. 
110S. 2d St., Phila. 



I86l. 

H. C. Pardoe, .... 
E. P. Rohbach, . . . 
Thomas J. Slaughter. 
Y. John Smalley, .... 
T. C. Thornton, M. D., 
*N. Vanderslice, . . . 
George P. Wilson, . . 



Renovo. 
Selinsgrove. 

Bridgeton, N. J. 
Lewisburg. 
1890. 

24 E. 1 6th St., Min- 
neapolis, Minn. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 83 

1862. 

A. J. Amerman. ^William H. Jones. 

*H. M. Baldrige 1895. H. Kauftman, Philadelphia. 

*J. D. Beugless, ... 1887. M. W. McHenry. 

^Philip L. Davies, . . . 1875. *A. J. Morris. 

George M. DePui. W. R. McNeil, .... Emporium. 

William Driesbach, . . . Philadelphia. J. P. Quigley, Lock Haven. 

*A. H. Folwell, .... 1872. W. M. Reber, M. D., . . Bloomsburg. 

J. W. Greenawalt. *E. L. Reber, 1887. 

Charles H. Gunter. Hon. W. S. Shallenberger, Rochester. 

Isaac M. Harris, .... Jersey Shore. *Fred Shelton. 

Oliver B. Imes, .... Philadelphia. J. R. Solts. 

1863. 

H. D. Albright, .... Muncy. John I. Mitchell, .... Mansfield. 

T. B. Botl, Philadelphia. /. H. Miller, Forestville, N. Y. 

Daniel E. Burt Roulette. * Augustus C. Norris, . . 1893. 

Henry A. Cleveland. James W. Pennepacker, . Lansdowne. 

W. K. Crites, Huntingdon. C. Shallenberger, . . . Rochester. 

William L. Griffin. Henry A. Smith. 

G. C. Kelly, Lewisburg. David Spencer, D. D., . Dover, N. J. 

D. Menigey. L. C. Waid. 

J. H. Myser. *James P. Young. 

1864. 

^Benjamin L. Bowen. *A. J. Hastings, .... 1878. 
Newton M. Brooks, . . . Office of Foreign William P.JJellings,D.D.,Omaha., Neb. 

Mails, Washing'n, F. P. LeFevre, Lancaster. 

D. C. Galen Lotz, New Berlin. 

Thomas Collings. A. G. Marr, Shamokin. 

* William H. Dickinson. * David R. McDermond, 1868. 

John G. Entrekin, . . . Vineland, N. J. Nelson A. Moulton, . . . Brockton, Mass. 

A. S. Everett, M. D., . . 1106 Masonic Lewis C. Paxson, .... Stockton, N. J. 

Temple, Chicago, Edward C. Romine, . .728 W. Huntingdon 

111. St., Phila. 

*Jenkin S. Evans. *Jos. S. Seagraves, M. D., 1863. 

Thomas Evans. * William N. Tower. 

M.M.Fogg, Kingwood, N. J. * Robert Vanvalzah, M.D., 1892. 

Clinton B. Gibbon, . . . 525 Cherry St., Phila. W.S.Wood.. . . • ■ Mt. Pleasant. 

1865. 

*Henry J. Heinen, . . .1887. *David B. Patterson. 

William E. Henning, . . Missouri. T. E. Philips, .... Mehoopany. 

*J. Washington Irving. E. H. Ranney, .... Germantown. 

*William M. Kennedy, . 1865. S. M. Sellers, M. D., . . Altoona. 

J. M. Kincaid, Topeka, Kan. Joseph H. Sheppard. 



8 4 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



1866. 



*John W. Custis, ... I! 

*R. E. Mcllwain, M. D., 1872. 

A. W. Mettler, Hedgesville, N. Y. 

E. R. Bliss, Chicago, 111. 

*E. E. Hill, 1866. 

*Jessie Z. Johnson, . . 1864. 
J. Calvin Leinbach, . . Sunbury. 
Hiram McGowan, M. D., Harrisburg. 



*Charles H. Mettler. 

G. Barron Miller, Esq., . Lewisburg. 

T/iomas Seyse, Sandusky, N. Y. 



1867. 



Charles Boust, 
Rest F. Curtis, 



Jerome Diffenderfer, . . 

Chas. F. Emericlc, . . . 
J. L. A. Garber. 

Nathan B. Gardner, . . 
Jeremiah Haines, . . . 

Shellman Jones, . . . , 

*Thomas S. McMahon, . 

Wilbur H. McDonald, . 
* Abraham A. McDonald 
William S. Meylert, 



Northumberland . 

Chauncey Hall, Bos- 
ton, Mass. 

Englewood, Chi- 
cago. 

U. S. Navy. 

Wilmington, Del. 

Moorestown, N. J. 

Pittsburg. 

1889. 

Pueblo, Col. 

LaPorte. 



Thos. P. Merritt, 
John B. Ritner. 
J. V. Strait on, . 
Leon B. Wolfe, 



1868. 

C. A. Meylert. 
Joseph C. Nesbit, . 
Charles M. Parker, 
Geo. D. Philips, . 
Joseph P. Philips, 
S. O. Reed, ... 
James F. Rush, 
Chas. H. Shivers, M 
Mark R. Sooy, . . 
A. G. Tillinghast, 
C. F. Walter, . . 
Frank Weckerly, . 

*John T. Williams. 



. Reading. 



. Scottdale. 
. Lewisburg. 



D 



. Lewisburg. 
. Clark's Green. 
. Atglen. 
. Mt. Carroll, 111. 
. Sunbury. 

. Falling Waters, W.Va. 
, Haddonfield, N. J. 
. Mt. Holly, N. J. 
. La Conner, Wash. 
. Lewisburg. 
. 433 Drexel Building, 
Phila. 



1869. 



James W. Atkinson. 
George K. Baker. 
J. Thompson Baker, 
*William F. Baker. 
J. G. Bawn, . . . . 



E. Morrison Beale, . . 
Samuel M. Brown. 
Lewis Burroughs, . . 
Matthew R. Calvin, . . 
Henry Croskey, M. D., 



William Dounton, 
*Horatio Ely. 



Lewisburg. 

65th & Hamilton 

Sts., Phila. 
Lewisburg. 

Picture Rocks. 
Hollidaysburg. 
R. 46, Commercial 

Block, Kansas 

City, Mo. 
Tioga, Phila. 



John S. Evans. 

John F. Fisher, M. D., 

*G. B. Frederick. 

I. C. Harvey, . . . . 

Robert E. James, . . . 

John H. Kain, . . . . 



Jonathan C. Kalbach, . 
George D. Kincaid. 
H. L. B. Kinport, . . 
R. G. F. Kshinka, . . 
Henry Kutz, D. D. S., 
David R. Landis, . . 
*A. B. Larison, M. D., 



Philadelphia. 

Lewisburg. 

Easton. 

City of Mexico, Mex- 
ico, care Mexican 
Central R. R. 

Host, Berks Co. 

Potacella, Idaho. 
Berwick. 
Allentown. 
Algona, Iowa. 
1872. 




Howard Malcom, D.D., LL. D. 

President, 1851-1857. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



87 



Joseph L. Marks. 

Chas. E. Medlam, . . . 719 N. 10th St., 

Phila. 
Wm. H. Merrell, M D., South Branch, N. J. 
Charles S. Mirick, . 



A. Scott Sheller, .... Lewisburg. 
Richard L. Shivers, . . . Washington, D. C. 
Walker R. Stephen, M. D., Reading. 
William H. Taylor, Jr. 



4018 Green St., Phila. James D. Wilson 
18/O. 



John D. Clark. 
Samuel C. Crawford, . 
David B. Duncan, . . 
Wm. H. Everett, LL. B . 
Charles H Grinnell, . . 
George L. Groff, . . . . 
A. G. Hetherington, . . 
Henry H Leamy, . . . 
John Lynn. 
Thomas C. McHenry. 
James M. McCoskey, . . 

P. M. Moore, 

Philip A. Nordell, D. D. 



Williamsport. 

I Broadway, N. Y. 

Tivoli. 

New York. 

Stroudsburg. 

Philadelphia. 

Warrensville. 



Renovo. 
Chesterville, Ohio. 



John C. Northrup, 
A. Judson Philips, . 
William R. Reud. 
Morris E. Reagan, . 
Charles E. Sheppard, 
Milton T. Slater, . . 
* William H. Slifer, . 
John B. Sturdevant, 
W. C. Speck. 
*Charles H. Strohecker, 
George Tomlinson, Jr., 
E. S. Wynn, .... 



1871 



A. J. Adams, .... 


. Duncan. 


George T. Bailey, . . 


. La Plume. 


Charles J. Beerstecker, 


. San Francisco, Cal. 


Gustavus A. Ettel, . . 


Philadelphia. 


*Argyle Finney. 




William A. Heinen, 


. Milton. 


George P. Hunter, . . 


. Easton. 


Newton Keim, Esq., . 


. Philadelphia. 


^Herbert A. Mace, . . 


. 1896. 



George D. Miles, . . 
*H. C. Noon, .... 
*W. M. Rooke, . . . 

Albert Rorke. 
Isaac Shivers, .... 
^Charles P. Shinn, . . 
Charles H. Thomas, . 
*George E. Van Gezer, 
* Duncan M. Young, . 



1872. 



Wm. H. Crotzer, M. D., . Vineland, N. J. 
George W. Goodman, . . Lewisburg. 

W. V. Kerr, Mooresburg. 

A. M. Matthews, M. D., . 75 Ocean St., Provi- 
dence, R. I. 
Thomas E. McMullin. 
C. IV. O. Xyce, .... Marlton, N. J. 



George G. Patrick. 
James W. Putnam, . 

Glenson S. Rhoads. 
Emery Robinson, . . 
H. M. Russell. 
Eli Slifer, Jr. 



Philadelphia. 



Glenburn. 

E. Northfield, Mass. 

Tank, Luzerne Co. 
Bridgeton, N. J. 
Washington, D. C. 

1879. 

New Albany. 

1893. 

Roadstown, N. J. 
412 Walnut Street, 
Phila. 



Big Rapids, Mich. 
1872. 

1873. 

Perkasie. 

1871. 

2121 N. 7th St., Phila. 

1870. 

1 891. 



. Trinity Baptist Ch., 
New York. 

. Wilkes-Barre. 



Capt. Tasker H. Bliss, 

George G. Craft, . . . 
David R. Davies, . . 



1873- 

Headquarters U. S. A., James M. Giddings. 

Wash., D. C. *F. M. Higgins, . 

Worcester, Mass. Frank J. Ingraham, 

Pittsburg. *Samuel S. Leeds. 



1887. 
Brunswick, Ga. 



C, B. Fink, Latrobe. 



H. M. Shallenberger, M. D., Rochester. 



88 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



Hamil Alexander, M. D. 
C. A. Brown, . . . 
W. S. Chappell, . 
W. R. Donachy, . . . 



Marietta. 
Exeter. 
Williamsport. 
Lock Haven. 



*G. T. Ellis, 1873. 

Charles Frederick. 
William Krider. 



1874. 



H. H. Marr. 

C. F. Overholt, . 

Porter M. Wilson, 

William L. Wilson. 
C. F. Zimmerman. 



Mt. Pleasant. 
7th and Filbert Sts., 
Phila. 



Clifford Blackburn, 
F. W. Brown, . . 
Wm. E. Crawford, 
W. J. Danby. 
Henry Lewallen. 



Philadelphia. 
Jacksonville, Fla. 
Hughesville. 



1875. 

T. A. Lloyd, 3931 Aspen St., Phila. 

D. L. McKinney, M. D., New Jersey. 

A. K. Marr, Shamokin. 

J. L. Myers, Roadstown, N. J. 

Moung Pho Sanwin. 



* Robert C. Black, . . 
William H. Christy. 
James H. Dietrick, 
J. D. DuShane, . . 
William L. Fry, . . 
Harry W. Henderson, 
John C. Moore, . . . 



. Jacksonville, 111. 
. Connellsville. 
. Williamsport. 
. Moore's. 
. Coatesville. 



1876. 

Newton H. Moore. 

Alva F. Perry, .... Pawling, N. V. 

John Reisinger, M. D., . Uniontown. 

James M. Stewart, M. D., Paterson, N. J. 

*W. W. Streeter, M. D., . 1892. 

* Philip Taylor, .... 1882. 

W. S. Thomas. 



1877. 



O. B. Dickinson, . . . 
William H. Eli r edge, 
William Hindman, . 
Lewis Jones. . . . 
David B. Marr. 
*Wade H. Matson, . 
J. J. Merkel, .... 



Chester. 

Lebanon. 

Reidsburg. 

Exeter, Luzerne Co. 

1877. 
Searsburg, N. Y. 



George IV. Noecker, 
George W. Roland, 
Robert L. Roller, 
Jasper W. Stout, . 
William E. Sutton, 
J. W. VanValzah, 
James H. Wiley, . 



. Reading. 

. South Bethlehem. 

. Holiidaysburg. 

. Williamsport. 

. St. George's, Del. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Philadelphia. 



*Milton B. Adams, . . . 1878. 
Judson W. Gray, .... Weshboro, Wis. 
Henry C. Hagenbuch, . . West Milton. 
Edward R. Helmbold, Jr., Eddington. 
* Frederick F. Hunter, . 1876. 



1878. 



William H. Humphreys, Port Norris, N. J. 
Charles M. Jones, . . . Oneonta, N. Y. 
* James F. Richards, . . 1888. 
George M. Walter ? . . . Chillisquaque. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



8 9 



B. E. Abraham, .... Abrams. 

Voris Auten, Mt. Carmel. 

Millard F. Briggs. 

*D. A. Chase, 1888. 

Alpheus B. Fitch, M. D., Factoryville. 

W. H. Fowler, Montgomery. 

Jesse E. Kinport, .... Grant. 



H. H. Campbell, .... Williamsport. 
William F. Davies, . . Scranton. 
E. W. Drinker, .... Scranton. 
Abram W. Frear, . . . Factoryville. 
J. F. Henderson. 
Edwin S. Heiser, M. D., Lewisburg. 



i8 79 . 

Frank T. Marsh, . . 
James K. Maus. 
J. E. K. Schwenck, . 
W. H. S. Scott. 
Charles F. Shaffer, . 
Albert J. Shedden, . 
O. J. Sturgis, . . 

I880. 

Augustus T. Moyer. 
Sidney W. Rivenbtcrg, 
J. R. Ruthrauff, . . 
James L. Say. 
George W. Stone, 
George M. Tustin, . 



. 1822 Arch St., Phila. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Lewisburg. 
. New York. 
. Uniontown. 



Burma. 
Waynesboro. 

Fredericksburg, la. 
Bloomsburg. 



D. A. Blose, Marchand. 

A.J. Brass, ioi6Fairmount Ave 

Phila. 

W. A. Crouse, Renovo. 

P. F. Duncan, Duncannon. 

M. L. Focht, M. D., . . Lewisburg. 
J. T. Gallagher, .... Lewisburg. 
P. S. Horton, Warren. 



1 88l. 

J. W. Hoskinson, .... Philadelphia. 
., W. G. Keys. 

E T. Loucks, Stoners. 

F. G. McKeever, .... New London, Conn. 
A. C. Overholt, .... West Overton. 

J. M. Park Montandon. 

H. C. Peeples, Rochester, N. Y. 

J. L. Williams, Darby. 



1882. 

C. N. Cox, ...... Brooklyn, N. Y. M. J. Sherwood, . 

W. T. Galloway, .... Hamilton Sq., N. J. A. J. Shoemaker, . 

John Jenkins, Stoneboro. J. B. Stevenson, . 

Thomas Lloyd, . . . . Hollidaysburg. A. H. VanDyke, . 

H. O. Noecker. C. A. Verner, . . 

J. W. Price, ...... Ashland. William Wilson, . 

1883. 

E. J. Brown, Wyoming, Del. J. V. Liddell, . . 

E. H. Eldredge, . . . 1838 Mt. Vernon St., G. A. Lung, M. D., 

Phila. 

W. H. Hassenplug, . . . Philadelphia. *H. C. Overholt, . 

M. F. Harley, Fairview Village. C. M. Reed, . . . 

B. L. Herr, 72 Court St., Bing- N. B. Williams, . 

hamton, N. Y. 

W. C. Kelly, Chester. J. Gundy Wolf, . 

7 



Pittsburg. 

Rosston. 

Pittsburg. 

Altoona. 

Pittsburg. 

Altoona. 



Charlotte, N. C. 
Surgeon S. S. Minn., 
Sta.G., New York. 

1895. 

Jersey City, N. J. 

2230 N. Front St., 

Phila. 
Lewisburg. 



90 



Memorials of Bucknell University 



O. B. Jenkins, Esq., 

G. F. McRae. 
Alex. Quernes, . . 



1884. 
241 Bullitt Building, Eugene Riehl, Appleton, Wis. 



Phila. 

610 Cambria St., 
Phila. 



J. J. Slifer, Lewisburg 

P. R. Tucker, Chicago. 

M. F. Tingley, Harford. 



F. S. Clapp, Williamsport. 

E. E. Davidson, .... Williamsport. 

F. S. Derr, M. D., . . . Watsontown. 
H. S. Foringer, .... Baltimore, Md. 
Rolfe Gerhart, Elkhorn, W. Va. 



1885. 

C. H. Hunter, Greensburg. 

J. N. Glover, State College. 

T. E. Shoemaker, . . . Pittsburg. 

G. H. Wood, Elmira, N. Y. 



Hans Adamsen, M. D., . Bangkok, Siam. 
W. L. Gerhart, M. D., . Lewisburg. 
Jonathan Heaton, . . . Spokane Falls, 

Wash. 
H. E. Jenkins, Lansdale. 



1886. 

William Jenkins. 

S. W. Morton, M. D., . 

T. H. Schooley, . . 



. 113 S. 20th St., 

Phila. 
. Denver, Colo. 



1887. 

J. R. Bear, Montgomery. E. M. Lake. 

J. C. Eccleston, .... Paranna Entre Rios, Lizzie Laning (Grove), . Spokane Falls, Mich. 

Argentine Repub- J. L. Merriman, .... Brattleboro, Vt. 

lie, S. A. Everett G. Owens, . . . Jeffersonville, Ohio. 

A. M. Freas, Esq., . . Wilkes-Barre. Alfred Turner, .... Duquesne. 

C. E. Grove, Doylestown. E. A. Watrous, . . . .257 West End Ave., 

Annie L. Hay, N. Cramer Hill, N. J. New York. 

G. B. Hall, M. D., . . . Renovo. A. T. Wells, Chicago. 

S. E. Kieffer, Anaheim, Cal. 



Charles D. Clingan, 

P. F. DeLancey, . , 

E. T Derr, . . . . 

C. L. Foresman, . . 
W. D. Groff. 

J. W. Hackney, . . 



1888. 
9th and Walnut Sts., A. M. Hendricks, 



Kansas City, Mo. A. W. Hodder, 



Waynesburg. 
Cleveland, Ohio. 
Seattle, Wash. 

Smith's Landing, 

N.J. 



/. D. Moore, . . 
W. S. Patrick, M. D 
J. B. Rickard, . . 
H. J. Roberts, . . 
J. W. Ruckman, . 
B. F. Squier, . . , 



Zanesville. Ohio. 
New York. 
Palmyra, N. J. 
Woodstown, N. J. 
Plymouth. 
Cassville, N. Y. 
Helena, Tex. 
Scran ton. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



9i 



John W. Forster, 
W. F. Gibbons, 
S. C. Harry, . 
H. V. Johnston 
R. B. Little, . 
D. K. Musser, 
John D. Musser 



Aaronsburg. 

Forty Fort. 

Baltimore, Md. 

Huntingdon. 

Montrose. 

Millheim. 

Lewisburg. 



1889. 

J .W. Neyman, 
H. B. Rankin, 
C. A. Rodenbaugh, 
John Skym, . 
W. E. Williams, . 
*H. L. Young, . . 
*R. B. Young, . . 



. Cherokee, Iowa. 

. Philadelphia. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Lansford. 

. Huntingdon, W. Va. 

• 1893. 
. 1886. 



1890. 



C. W. Dawson, .... Scranton. 

J. A. Knozvlton, .... Lebanon, Ind. 

T. J. Purdy, Sunbury. 

E. B. Cole, Hightstown, N. J. 

T. J. Cross Atlantic City, N. J. 

M. M. Davis, M. D., . . Indiana. 

C. W. Haines, .... Washingtonville, 

N.J. 
Howland Hanson. 

I. S. Hankins, Burma. 

O. F. Hershey, Baltimore. 



E. T. Townsend, 
P. B. Wolfe, . 



. Phillipsbur^ 
. Lewisburg. 



1 89I. 

*W. M. Kinports, . . . 1895. 

W. F. Mets, Somerville, N. J. 

W. N. Morris, Philadelphia. 

C. K. Newell, Big Flats, N. Y. 

Hattie B. Pitts (Newell), Big Flats, N. Y. 
F. F. Pierson, M. D., . . Wilmington, Del. 

C. E. Shuster, Rochester, N. Y. 

Charles De Woody, . . . Waverly, N. Y. 



1892. 



Clayton Bennett, .... San Francisco, Cal. 

Sarah Evans, Elizabeth, N. J. 

Samuel Iredell, .... Bridgeton, N. J. 
(?. Fred Love, Rochester, N. Y. 



A. Gertrude Myers, 
William C. Noll, . 
E. E. Pauling, . . 
*W. T. Snyder, . 



. Huntingdon. 
. Wellsville, N. Y. 
. Salem. 
. 1889. 



1893. 



J. H. Blackwood, .... Scranton. 

H. A. Denny, Montrose. 

C. A. Derr, Limestoneville. 

P. J. Dickerson, .... Turtle Creek. 
C. A. Emmons, M. D., . Chicago, 111. 

S. A. Field, Westfield. 

W. W. Goodwin, .... Jefferson. 

J. P. Griffith, Lewisburg. 

J. W. Ivins, Red Bank, N. J. 

C. A. Kram, Washington, D. C. 



J. M. Kiefer, . . . 

Hannah A. Nye, . . 

H. H. Null, Jr., . . 
Florence Pannebaker, 

C. F. Rinker, . . . 

H. W. Sneck, . . 

C. Dale Wolfe, . . 

John E. Williams, . 

S. H. Zimmerman, . 



Tunkhannock. 

Carbon dale. 

Greensburg. 

Lewistown. 

Eaton. 

Rochester, N. Y. 

Lewisburg. 

Scranton. 

Harrisburg. 



9 2 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



B. A. Baldwin, . . 

Mary Castle, . . . . 

Margaret Dice, . . . 

H. L. Hallowell, . . 

R. A. Hoffa, . . . 
Theodore Heysham, 
George C. Horter, 
James Maclnnis, . . 



Thayetmyo, Burma 
Granville, O. 
Pittsburg. 
1431 N. 7th St., 

Phila. 
Lewisburg. 
Norristown. 
Philadelphia. 
Philadelphia. 



1894. 

H. H. Kinney, Sunbury. 

Susie Kurtz, Williamsport. 

Winifred Lyman, .... Coudersport. 
G. W. Maynard, .... Harford. 
Edwin Morgan, .... Stroudsburg. 

T. S. Morgan, Danville. 

De Leroy Merriman,M.D., Carlisle. 

C. J. Moon, Elkland. 

A. M. Wyant, Mt. Pleasant, Pa. 



1895. 

V. S. Anderson Camden, N. J. W. D. Kinsloe, 

H. S. Bourn, 2223 Woodstock St., E. G. Kendall, . 

Phila. 

W. J. Davis, S. Main Ave., Sara Merriman, . . 

Scranton. R. D. Minch, . . 

D. H. Bradley, Philadelphia. W. V. Oglesby, . 

Myra Baldwin (Allen), .Mansfield. Martha L. Root, . 

T. J. Baldrige, Hollidaysburg. W. C. Scotney, 

D. C. Davis, Shamokin. R. H. Simpson, . 

Irene Dickson Williamsport. D. A. Solly, . . . 

J. S. Gochenour. 

E. M. Greene, Saltillo. G. I. Taggart, Jr., 

C. F. Hall. Helen B. Thomas, 

Alfred Hayes, Jr., . . . Lewisburg. P. E. Weithaase, . 

Geo. L. Huff. William Wilson, . 



Newton Hamilton. 
62 Lake Place, 

New Haven, Conn. 
Lewisburg. 
Hawley. 
Danville. 
Cambrigeboro. 
Moores. 
Clifford. 
3649 Smedley St., 

Phila. 
Savannah, Ga. 
Adrian, Mich. 
Camden, N. J. 
Tylerhill. 



0. E. Bailey, Washington, D. C. 

J. E. Brownell, Muncy. 

A. H. Catterall, .... Wyoming. 
Katherine Detwiler, . . Norristown. 

1. Baker Greene, .... 1605 S. 12th St., 

Phila. 

W. R. Harper, Erie. 

L. J. Keiser, ....... Lewisburg. 

W. J. Irwin, Cowan. 

J. G. Kramer, Shamokin. 

Wilbur J. Lewis, .... William Penn. 
Milton Loeb, Sunbury. 



1896. 

Irwin McCarty, .... Sunbury. 

C. A. Mudge, Williamsport. 

I. M. Portser, ..... Greensburg. 

C. K. Robb, 1522 N. 1 2th St., 

Phila. 
Lewis H. Ryon, .... Shamokin. 

R. F. Trainer, Philadelphia. 

Roland Webster, . . . . E. New Market, Md. 
W. A. Wilkinson, . . . Westmont, N. J. 
H. J. Williams, . . . Ashland. 
J. Marion Vastine, . . . Catawissa. 
J. O. Yoder, Stroders Mills. 







Rev. Justin Rolph Loomis, Ph. D., LL. D. 

Professor, 1854-1879. President, 1857-1879. Trustee, 1867-1882. 



TLhc 3Facult£ of the Colleoe. 

1895*96. 



John Howard Harris, Ph. D., LL. D., President, 

and Professor of Psychology and Ethics. 

Freeman Loomis, A. M., Ph. D., 

Professor of Modern Languages and Literature. 

George G. Groff, M. D., LL. D., 

Professor of Organic Sciences. 

William Cyrus Bartol, A. M., Ph. D., 

Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy. 

Frank Ernest Rockwood, A. M., 

Professor of the Latin Language and Literature. 

William Gundy Owens, A. M., 

Professor of Physics and Chemistry. 

Enoch Perrine, A. M., Litt. D., 

John P. Crozer Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature, and Secretary. 

Thomas Franklin Hamblin, A. M., 

New Jersey Professor of the Greek Language and Literature. 

95 



96 Memorials of Bucknell University. 

Lincoln Hulley, A. M., Ph. D., 

Professor of History and Hebrew. 

William Emmett Martin, A. M., 

Professor of Logic and Anthropology. 

Llewellyn Phillips, A. M., 

Instructor in Elocution. 

Elysee Aviragnet, A. M., 

Instructor in the Romance Languages. 

Albert Burns Stewart, A. M., 

Instructor in Mathematics. 

Leo Guido Charles Riemer, A. B., 

Instructor in Latin and German. 

Nelson Fithian Davis, Sc. B., 

Assistant in Organic Science. 

Heman Lincoln Wayland, D. D., 

Lecturer on Sociology. 

George Dana Boardman, D. D., LL. D., 

Lecturer on Social Ethics. 
William Christian Gretzinger, Ph. B., 

Registrar of the University. 



Stubents in the Colleoe* 



1895*96, 



Canoioates for tbe Master's 2>egree. 



Ezra Allen, A. B., . . . Coudersport. 
Nellie W. Conard, Ph. B., Philadelphia. 
Harvey L. Fassett, Ph. B., Hightstown, N. J. 
Warren L. Kaufman, Ph.B.Harrisburg. 
Alonzo C. Lathrop, A. B., Everett. 
Kate I. McLaughlin, A. B.Lewisburg. 



Jacob H. Minick, A. B., . Orrstown. 
Wm. T. Paullin,Jr.,A. B.,Philadelphia. 
Herbert M. Pease, A. B., Eatonville. 
Herbert S. Schuyler, Sc. B.Kutztown. 
Frank M. Simpson, Sc. B., Sharon. 
Bromley Smith, A. B., . Factory ville. 



Graduate Students, 12. 



Gbe Senior CU05. 



Leander W. Baldwin, 
Charles J. Berger, 
Hervey H. Bower, 
Frederick W. Brown 
Alvin A. Cober, . 
Harry T. Colestock, 
Mary Cotton, . . 
John W. Davis, 
Alexander Douglass 
Fred. Delisle Finn, 
Charles Firth, . . 
Foster C. Fisher, . 
Forrest L. Fulton, 
Elwood T. Haddock 
William E. Hall, . 
Herbert F. Harris, 
Fred. B. Hunt, . . 
Albert W. Johnson, 



Hilltown. 

Philadelphia. 

Lewisburg. 

Franklin. 

Newberry. 

Crooked Creek. 

Lewisburg. 

Great Bridge, Va. 

Philadelphia. 

Clifford. 

Chester. 

Salem. 

New Washington. 

Media. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Square Top. 

New Berlin. 



Thomas L. Josephs, 
Daniel E. Lewis, . . 
James D. Macnab, . 
Robert B. McCay, . 
Frank B. Miller, . . 
Ervin R. Powell, . . 
Barclay Reynolds, Jr., 
Albert C. Rohland, . 
Mary Rohrer, . . 
Albert W. Stephens, 
Josiah B. Suiter, . . 
Thomas R. Taggart, 
Lewis C. Walkinshaw, 
Berton B. Ware, . . 
Amos T. Williams, 
Mary M. Wolfe, . 
Samuel R. Wood, . 



Seniors, 35. 



Lindsey. 
Conshohocken. 
Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Sunbury. 
Lewisburg. 
Ellwood City. 
Rising Sun, Md. 
West Newton. 
Lewisburg. 
Mount Pleasant. 
Lock Haven. 
Hughesville. 
Greensburg. 
Millville, N. J. 
Ridgway. 
Lewisburg. 
Chester. 



97 



9« 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



Zhe junior Class, 



George F. Baker, 
Abram S. Barner, 
Willard M. Bunnell, 
Le Roy Tyson Butler, 
Merton R. Collins, 
John A. Cutler, 
William F. Eichholtz, 
Jerome C. Fetzer, . 
Vincent B. Fisk, . 
Edward P. Gilchrist 
Anna K. Goddard, 
James A. Guie, 
David S. Grim, 
John M. Gundy, . 
Howard L. Guss, . 
Maud E. Hanna, . 
Rosa L. Hartley, . 
Frank Hollinshead, 



John T. Anderson, 
Enos C. Baker, 
Louis H. Burge, . 
Mary E. Chambers, 
Charles W. Clement 
Vida S. Davenport, 
George M. Davis, 

James R. L. Diggs, 
Frank W. Dillon, 
Elwood H. Dutton, 
David H. Elliot, . 
Levi T. Fetzer, . . 
Harry C. Fithian, 
Edward Flint, . . 
Andrew M. Forrester 
Simon W. Gilpin, 
Anna M. Gilchrist, 
Walter L. Hill, . 
George A. Jennings, 
Frank C. Katherman, 
Eugene E. Kerstetter, 
Charles Dison Koch, 
Ralph F. Koons, . . 



Dauphin. 

Towanda. 

Montrose. 

Montandon. 

Roaring Branch. 

Philadelphia. 

Sunbury. 

Milton. 

Erie. 

Wade, Fla. 

Hamilton, N. Y. 

Catawissa. 

Bower's Station. 

Lewisburg. 

Mifflinburg. 

Bradford. 

Guelph, Ont. 

Philadelphia. 



Robert O. Koons, 
Edward C. Kunkle, 
John V. Lesher, . 
Herbert B. Moyer, 
Ernest R. Myers, . 
Ferdinand F. Nelson, 
William H. Parker, . 
Romeyn Rivenburg, 
William H. Rodgers, 
Louis B. Sinnette, 
John Y. Sinton, . . 
Harry T. Sprague, . 
Ruth H. Sprague, . 
Herbert C. Stanton, . 
Carl Summerbell, . . 
Nellie Taylor, . . . 
John McCalmont Wilson, 
Palmer L. Williams, . . . 
Juniors, 36. 



Conyngham. 

Newberry. 

Northumberl and. 

Norristown. 

Huntingdon. 

Richmond, Va. 

Jenkintown. 

Clifford. 

Allentown. 

Buffalo, N. Y. 

Wilmington, Del. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Chinchilla. 

Lewisburg. 

Factoryville. 

Franklin. 

Scranton. 



Zhc Sopbomote Glass. 

Lewisburg. John G. Lauderbaugh, 



Ercildoun. 

Vineland, N. J. 

West Chester. 

Sunbury. 

Pittston. 

Atlantic Highlands, 

N. J. 
Forrestville, Md. 
Union City. 
Lewisburg. 
Hartleton. 
Milton. 

Greenwich, N. J. 
Philadelphia. 
Moreland. 
Newfoundland. 
Wade, Fla. 
Rochester, N. Y. 
Great Bridge, Va. 
Lewisburg. 
Lewisburg. 
Clarkestown. 
Huntingdon Mills. 



Daniel K. Laudenslager 
Harriet I. Lewis, . . 
Andrew A. Leiser, Jr., 
Charles A. Lindemann, 
James B. Martin, . 
Roy B. Mulkie, . 
Hiram L. Purdy, . 
Robert V. Rex, . 
George T. Ritter, 
Anna M. Rodgers, 
John E. Saul, . . 
Flora A. Sigel, 
Grace Slifer, . . . 
Robert G. Slifer, . 
Arthur A. Smith, . 
James P. Stober, . 
Benjamin F. Thomas, 
Frank W. Tilley, 
Morris C. Van Gundy, 
Fred W. Wagner, 
John Walls, . . 
Mary E. Wilson, 



. Library. 

. Quakertown. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Philadelphia. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Union City. 

. Sunbury. 

. Mauch Chunk. 

. Williamsport. 

. Allentown. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Watsontown. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Liberty. 

. Kleinfeltersville. 

. Clifford. 

. Bridgeton, N. J. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Bradford. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Lewisburg. 



Sophomores, 46. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



99 



^Ibe tfresbman Class. 



Henrietta Allen, . . 
Laura L. Allen, . . 
Floyd G. Ballentine, 
George L. Bayard, . 
Frank J. Be van, . . 
John H. Bogert, . . 
James C. Bryson, . . 
Irving H. Buckminster, 
John E. Calvin, . . 
Marion A. Carringer, 
James L. Cattell, 
George H. Catterall, 
Samuel J. Cleeland, 
Emmanuel W. Cober, 
Evarts C. Conover, . 
Hubert F. Cook, . . 
William A. Cook, . 
Thomas E. Cooper, . 
Rees A. Davis, . . 
Charles G. Davis, 
Oliver J. Decker, . . 
Amos K. Deibler, 
Arthur M. Devall, . 
Grace A. De Wolfe, . 
John P. Diffenderfer, 
William H. Engle, . 
Clarissa L. Fowler, . 
John D. Frederick, . 
Gottlieb L. Freudenber- 
ger, ...... 

Albert R. Garner, 
Benjamin W. Griffith, 
Leroy Hall, .... 

Adoniram J. Hanna, 
Albert L. Hanna, . . 
Charles W. Harvey, 



Allenwood. 
Coudersport. 
Clarion. 

Plymouth Meeting. 
Mt. Carmel. 
Paterson, N. J. 
Watsontown. 
Vineland, N. J. 
Transfer. 
Marienville. 
Denver, Col. 
Wyoming. 
Philadelphia. 
Pine Hill. 
Hamilton Sq., N. J. 
Forestville, N. Y. 
Forestville, N. Y. 
Union City. 
Mt. Carmel. 
Sunbury. 
Duboistown. 
Deibler's. 
Wharton. 
Newark, N. J. 
Kelly Cross Roads. 
Sunbury. 
Olean, N. Y. 
Reading. 

Tamaqua. 

Philadelphia. 

St. Clair. 

Union City. 

Pottsville. 

Pottsville. 

Unionville. 



Fresh 



Joseph C. Hazen, . . . 

J. W. Hile, 

Albert Hutchinson, . . 
George E. Jenkinson, . 

Robert M. Ivins, . . 
Howard L. Kaucher, . 
Ned L. Kaufman, 
Charles S. Keen, . . 
Daniel H. Krise, . . 
Oscar R. LeVan, . . 
Alice J. Lillibridge, . 
Christian L. McQuistion, 
Charles P. Meeker, . 
Howard C. Meserve, 
William R. Morris, . 
Arthur C. Mulford, . 
Maurice B. Mulford, 
Edwin L. Nesbit, . . 
Frank J. Rawlinson, 
George L. Rees, . . 
Reuben L. Rentz, 
David H. Robbins, , 
Martin L. Ross, . . 
Mary E. Schuyler, . 
Mary H. Sharpless, . 
Edgar K. Shumaker, 
Myra A. Sprague, 
Francis M. Stapleton, 
Gertrude Stephens, 
Mary Stephens, . . 
Howard I. Stewart, . 
Margaret A. Thomas, 
George S. Tilly, . . 
William T. Todd, . 
William M. Warren, 
men, 70. 



. Achor, Ohio. 
. Lock Haven. 
. Holmes. 

. Atlantic Highlands, 
N.J. 
Trenton, N. J. 
. Reynoldsville. 
. Kutztown. 
. Cramer Hill, N. J. 
. Liberty. 
. Hamburg. 
. Olyphant. 
. Butler. 

. Rahn's Station. 
. New Haven, Conn. 
. Scranton. 
. Bridgeton, N. J. 
. Bridgeton, N. J. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Alexandria, Va. 
. Philadelphia. 
. Montgomery. 
. Mooresburg. 
. Mifflinburg. 
. Everett. 
. West Chester. 
. New Bethlehem. 
. Factoryville. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Watsontown. 
. Frostburg, Md. 
. Bridgeton, N. J. 
. Allegheny City. 
. Germantown. 



pursuing Special Studies. 



Joseph H. Cooke, 
Amzi Wilson Geary, 
Frank Earle Hering, 



Philadelphia. 

Carbondale. 

Williamsport. 



Frederick W. Robbins, 
R. T. Wiltbank, Jr., • . 



Muncy. 
Philadelphia. 



100 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



Summary 



Graduate Students, , 12 

The Senior Class, 35 

The Junior Class, 36 

The Sophomore Class, 46 

The Freshman Class, 70 

Pursuing Select Studies, 5 

Total in the College, 204 

In other departments, 226 

Total in all departments, 430 





George Ripley Bliss, D. 1)., LL. D. 

Professor of Greek, 1849-1874. Librarian, 1849-1874. 



{principals of tbe Hcabem\>- 



1849-51 
1851-57 
1857-59 
1859-65 
1865-66 
1866-68 
1868-69 
1 869-70 
1870-73 
1873-94 
1894. 



Isaac N. Loomis, A. M. 
Harvey D. Walker, A. M. 
George Yeager, A. M. 
Isaac C. Wynn, A. M. 
Rev. James Waters, A. M. 
Silas H. La Rue, A. M. 
Freeman Loomis, A. M. 
R. H. L. Atkinson, B. S. 
Jonathan Jones, A. M. 
William E. Martin, A. M. 
Thomas A. Edwards, A. M. 



IFnstmctors of tbe Hcabem\>. 

(Who served two years or more.) 



1850-55. 


Norman Ball. 




1880-85. 


1851-53. 


Malachi F. Taylor. 




1885-87. 


1857-63. 


Morris W. Cramer. 




1888-92. 


1 863-66. 


Owen P. Eaches, A. 


B. 


1888. 


1865-69. 


Norman Ball. 




1889-92. 


1870-72. 


Wm. E. Martin, A. E 




1892. 


1873-75. 


Wm. Edwin Cornog, 


B. E. 


1892. 


1879-82. 


Wm. M. Datesman. 







Wm. Gundy Owens, A. B. 
Rev. Isaac N. Hill, A. M. 
Thomas F. Hamblin, A. M, 
Albert Burns Stewart, A. M. 
Lincoln Hulley, A. B. 
Geo. Elmer Fisher, Ph. B. 
Llewellyn Phillips, A. M. 



10 



H instructors of tbe Hcabem\>. 

1895*96. 



John Howard Harris, Ph. D., LL. D., 

President of the University. 



Thomas A. Edwards, A. M., Principal, 

Latin . 

Albert Bums Stewart, A. M., 

Mathematics. 

George Edward Fisher, Ph. B., 

English and Science. 

Llewellyn Phillips, A. M., 
Greek. 

Ezra Allen, A. B., 

Proctor. 

Mrs. Anna M. Black, 

Matron. 

William Christian Gretzinger, Ph. B., 

Registrar of the University. 
104 



Stubents in the Hcabem\\ 



1895*96* 



THE FOURTH FORM. 



Classical. 



Edward Bell, . . . 

Henry L. Craig, . . 

Andrew N. Evans, . 

Evan D. Field, . . 

Charles F. Kulp, . . 

Harry L. Maize, . . 
Edward D. Mitchell, 



Sabbath Rest. 

Philadelphia. 

Montandon. 

Smithfield. 

Philadelphia. 

Lewisburg. 

Philadelphia. 



Charles J. Pearse, 
Edgar Reed, . . 
John Sherman, . . 
August Shuhart, . 
Henry E. Stabler, 
William S. Wenck, 



Payette, Idaho. 

Lairdsville. 

Philadelphia. 

Philadelphia. 

Warrensville. 

Northumberland. 



Bryant E. Bower, 
Thomas R. Bower, 
John W. Cottrell, 
Arthur N. De Vore, 



Lewisburg. 
Lewisburg. 
Union City. 
Lewisburg. 



Scientific. 



Ernest E. Johnson, . 
Thornmore Shorkley, 
John H. Vincent, Jr., 



Lewisburg. 
Lewisburg. 
Northumberland. 



THE THIRD FORM. 



Classical. 



George W. Alexander, 
Caleb B. Ayars, . . . 
Mark L. Anthony, . . 
Carlton C. Comfort, 
William Devitt, . . . 
Alfred A. Earle, . . . 
Ralph G. Hartley, . . 
Rush H. Kress, . . . 
8 



Philadelphia. 
Wilmington, Del. 
Mt. Top. 
Bristol. 
Manayunk. 
Lewisburg. 
Guelph, Ont. 
Centralia. 



Raymond G. Pierson, 
Hugo B. C. Riemer, 
Joseph Z. Rowe, . . 
Walter E. Ruch, . . 
Edgar T. Shields, 
William B. Stoner, . 
John S. Stephens. 
Charles W. Wolfe, . 



Philadelphia. 

Brookston. 

Reading. 

Northumberland . 

Lewisburg. 

Sunbury. 

Lewisburg. 

Bangor. 

io 5 



io6 



Memorials of Bucknell University 



Thomas Evans, Jr., 
Gordon Forster, . 
Raymond Greene, 
Jesse C. Higgins, . 



Freeland. 
Lewisburg. 
Lewistown. 
Lewisburg. 



Scientific. 



Robert J. Powell, .... Ridgway. 

Ezra J. Wager, Hillsgrove. 

Samuel Wittenmyer, Jr., . Middleburgh. 
John A. Young, .... New Columbia. 



THE SECOND FORM. 



Harold L. Barnes, 
Orren R. Barrett, . 
Fleming C. Bower, . 
William A. Bowman 
Robert N. Brady, . . 
Frank E. Burpee, . . 
Malcolm P. Davis, . 
•Clarence G. Dill, . . 
Adam M. Diffenderfer, 
William M. Groff, . 
Augustus N. Harmon, 
Rutherford B. Hadley, 



. Bayonne, N. J. 
. Fisher's Ferry. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Bridgeport. 
. Union City. 
. Erie. 

. Lewisburg. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Kelly X Roads. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Lock Haven. 
. Scranton. 



John S. Hoffa, . . . 
Joseph H. Jeremiah, 
Evan G. Jones, . . . 
William N. Marsh, . 
Harry V. Miller, . . 
John B. Packer, . . 
Thomas B. Parker, . 
David A. Pitts, . . . 
Thomas A. Sherbondy 
George H. Stewart, . 
John D. Thomas, . . 
Eli S. Walls, .... 



Washingtonville. 

Scranton. 

Scranton. 

Lewisburg. 

Philadelphia. 

Sunbury. 

Philadelphia. 

Philadelphia. 

Philadelphia. 

Lewisburg. 

Lansford. 

Lewisburg. 



Richard M. Bell, . 
Merle M. Edwards, 
John C. Groff, . . 
Reese H. Harris, . 



THE FIRST FORM. 



Sabbath Rest. 
Lewisburg. 
Lewisburg. 
Lewisburg. 



George H. Hyde, . 
William C. Packer, 
Stephen Treverton, 
Tohn G. Wood, . . 



. Ridgway. 
. Sunbury. 
. Ivanhoe, Va. 
. Erie. 



PURSUING SELECT STUDIES. 



Maineard L. Baker, . . . Cowan. 

Harry C. Beck, Philadelphia. 

Harry R. Boone, .... St. Clair. 
George J. Dickinson, . . Brook ston, 
Carroll L. Douglass, . . Bradford. 
Harry O. Eisenhauer, . , Kelly X Roads. 

Elbert Huff, Stonington. 

Louis Marcus, Lewisburg. 



Emmons L. Peck, 
Carl H. Senn, . . 
Harry C. Simons, . 
William S. Skinner, 
Harry R. Thornton, 
Benjamin Whitman, 
James B. Zeller, . 



. Carbondale. 

. Williamsport. 

. Oak Lane, Philada. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Lewisburg. 



Total in the Academy, 91. 



Iprincipals of tbe Unstitute. 



1852-54. Hadassah E. Scribner. 

1854-63. Amanda Taylor. 

1863-69. Lucy W. Rundell. 

1869-78. Harriet E. Spratt. 

1878-82. Jonathan Jones, A. M. 

1882. Katherine B. Larison, A. M. 



Instructors of tbe Ifnstitute- 

(Who have served two years or more.) 



1852-55. Melville Malcom. 1872-74. 

1854-56. Mrs. D. Kane. 1873-82. 

1855-78. Harriet E. Spratt. 1875-78. 

1855-65. Martha S. Wilson. 1875-82. 

1855-57. Emma Robinson. 1878-83. 

1856-60. Maria D. Mason. 1878-81. 

1858-66. P. Theodore Held. 1881-89. 

1858-61. Ruth S.Warren. 1882-86. 

1860-62. Anna Carpenter. 1883-85. 

1863-67. Celinda Hilker. 1883-85. 

1864-75. Mary E. Brown. 1883-86. 

1 865-7 1 • phebe A - Knight. 1 884-88. 

1865-68. Mary A. Hakes. 1885-88. 

1866-68. Alexander M. Loos. 1885-93. 

1867-69. Kate B. Brown. 1887-91. 
1868-70. Hermann F. Eberhardt. 1887-89. 

1869-71. Margaret Bell. 1888-95. 

1869-71. Helen A. Bissell. 1889, 

1870-75. E. Gertrude Hamilton. 1891 

1870-80. Mary E. Hendershot. 1893 

1871-75. Marcia M. Allen. 1895 

1871-78. Sarah A. Reed. 1895 
1872-75. Lucy M. Hamilton. 



Jean A. Soars. 
Mary S. Toner. 
Ella M. Ruthrauff. 
Maria A. Shaaber. 
Mary C. Evans. 
Ellen M. Greene. 
Elizabeth K. Gerhart. 
Carrie Loomis. 
F. Jeanette Waffle. 
Annie M. T. Williamson. 
Martha D. Woodward. 
Mary E. Brown. 
Edith V. Hedges. 
Cornelia C. Bronson. 
Ada C. Groom, A. B. 
Margaret P. Tustin. 
Frances Mary Rush, A. B. 
Candace Wood. 
Harriet C. Armitage. 
Eliz. C. Eddelman, Sc. B. 
Eliza Bell, Ph. B. 
Jessie J. Wheeler, A. B. 

107 



Zhe Hlumn^ of tbe institute. 



The * indicates deceased. 
1 3.54- 

*Susan I. McLeod (Bow- Frances E. Scribner 

man). (Flint), Topsham, Me. 

1855. 

Elizabeth J. Mustin (Lynch), Philadelphia. Maria M. Probasco (Tus- 

*Harriet E. Spratt, . . . .1878. tin), ....... . 1602 Summer St., 

Phila. 

1856. 

Malvina Rowland (Frear), Wilkes-Barre. Martha S. Wilson. 

1857- 

Elizabeth Ayers, .... Greenwich, N. J. ^Amanda Ogden. 
*Agnes E. Dale. Augusta B. Tucker (Loom- 
Eliza Giddings (Pierce), . Pittston. is), Lewisburg. 

1858. 

Jennie M. Beaver (Furst), Lock Haven. Annie C.Linn (Angle), . Strafford. 

Annie Bell (Stubbs), . .Philadelphia. Harriet C. Mason (Steph- 

*Letitia A. Bell (Rey- ens), Newton Centre. 

nolds). * Annie E. Morris. 

Anna Carpenter, .... Jersey Shore. Clara Musser (Hawn), . Delaware, O. 

Sallie E. Chamberlain (Ec- Amaly Volkmar (Man- 

cleston), Brazil, S. A. ^ e y)> Williamsport. 

*Clara E. Hood (David- Mary E.Walls (Bucher), . Lewisburg. 

son). Mary A. Wolfe (Bates), .Lewisburg. 

S. Salome Le Fevre . . . Lancaster. *Kate Wolf, 1862. 

108 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



109 



Mary E.James (Purdy), . Sunbury. 
*Mary S. Jones, .... 1894. 



1859. 



^Adelaide Spratt (Myers), 1884. 
Margaret A. Yoder (Rue), Hoboken, N. J. 



i860. 



Mary M. Bell (Wilson), . Rochester. 

Lucy R. Bliss, A. M., . . Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Jennie M. Dawson (Mc- 

Phail), Rangoon, Burma. 

Martha E. Ireland (Hay- 
hurst), . . ... Denver, Col. 

^Martha D.Jones (Acker), 1882. 

Sarah R. Meixell (Shork- 

ley), Lewisburg. 



* Marion L. Hornet (Kress). 

Frances E. Kelly, . . . Lewisburg. 



Susie R. Mcintosh. 
Mary L. Neyhart (Beck- 

ner), Lewisburg. 

*Mary E. V. Pardoe. 
Elizabeth K. Philips 

(Young), Atglen. 

Mary E. Slifer (Thomas), Baltimore, Md. 
*Martha G. Tucker, . . .1864. 



l86l. 



Mary J. Philips (Miller), Lewisburg. 
Agnes Reilly, Lock Haven. 



Mary E. Brown (Martin), Lewisburg. 
Caroline H. Chamber- 
lain (Clapp), . . . Manchester, N. H. 
Sallie C. Jones (Davis), . Philadelphia. 
*Kate R.Jones (Haskins). 
Laura McMiller. 
Mary C. Reed (Smith), . Lewisburg. 



Sue A. Ammon, .... Lewisburg. 

Margaret S. Beaver (Cas- 

sidy), Pittsburg. 

Mary C. Cox (Oberlin), . Milton. 

Margaret M. Marr (Bar- 
ber) , Philadelphia. 

Martha E. Meixell 

(Wolfe), Lewisburg. 



Ellen S. Dickson (Wil- 
son), ... . . Philadelphia. 

Sue D. Langstaff ( How- 
ell), Mount Holly, N.J. 

Annie E. Lloyd (Reilly), Philadelphia. 



1862. 

Julia C. Ritter (Ginter), . Lewisburg. 
Margaret A. Russell (Kin- 

caid), Topeka, Kan. 

Mary J. Watrous (Kel- 

say), Grand Rapids, Mich. 

Annie M.Young, .... Washington, D. C. 

1863. 

Sarah N. Neyhart, . . . Lewisburg. 

*Mary E. Robinson, . . 1889. 

Hannah W. Sheppard, . Trenton, N.J. 

Cynthia S. Sheppard (Su- 

ter), Mount Holly, N. J. 

Margaret G. Walls (Bar- 
ber), Bird's Creek, Md. 

1864. 

*Ella D. Quinby (Weeks). 
Phebe J. Quinby (Mc- 

Yitty, Bryn Mawr. 

*Anna M. Taylor (Dut- 

ton). 



no 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



Mattie A. Alden (Humis- 

ton) , Guy's Mills. 

Valeria R. Beck (Myers), Lewisburg. 

Clara Bell, Sabbath Rest. 

*Emma L. Dean (Ander- 
son), 1896. 

Florence Dysart, .... Marshall, Texas. 

Rachie I. Haines (Wools- 
ton), Marlton, N. J. 

*E. G. Hamilton, . . . 1875. 

Hetty Henry (Johnston), Huntingdon. 

Mary G. Leas (Lovell), . Huntingdon. 

Ella A. Parker, .... Alden, N. Y. 



Maggie Bell (Dean), . . 
Nellie A. Bell (Roller), . 
Mary C. Bliss (Jones), 
Emma Bowen (Williams), 
Emma W. Brown 

(Davenport), . . . . 
Annie R. Ely (Abraham), 
Phebe Gilday (Shanafelt), 
M. Jennie Jones, .... 
Emily J. Leas (Emery), . 



Hollidaysburg. 
Hollidaysburg. 
Chester. 
Blakely. 

West Pittston. 
Freehold, N. J. 
Huron, S. D. 
Pittston, Pa. 
Williamsport. 



*Haddie V. Barnhurst 

(Teasdale). 
Katherine B. Brown 

(Larison), Lewisburg. 

*Maggie E. Cunkle 

(Criswell), 1876. 

Nettie L. Dunham (Crary), Sheffield. 
Hannah E. Johnston, . . Reading. 



Mary V. Beck (McCoy), . Wilkes-Barre. 
Anna M. Boyle, .... Philadelphia. 
Pattie Chamberlain, . . West Chester. 
^Isabella Evans ( Mentzer) ,1881. 
FrancesL.Garrard( Wells), Charleston, S. C. 
Fannie R. Marsh, . . . Harrisburg. 
Lizzie Miller (Bailey), . Wilmington, Del. 
Emily Pennypacker 

(Reid), West Chester. 



1865. 

Isadora Purinton (Mur- 
ray), Woodside, Del. 

Asenath J. Shaaber (Shaa- 
ber,) Reading. 

*Grace G. Slough (Crip- 
pen). 

Kate E. Snyder (Under- 
wood), Schoolcraft, Mich. 

*Sallie Taylor. 

Fidelia Teed (Dunham). 

Alice A. Thornton (Cas- 

tlebury), Hazleton. 

1866. 

Lottie McCreight, . . . Pine Ridge Agency, 

S. D. 
Rebecca H. Orwig, . . St. Louis, Mo. 
Eliza C. Peterson 

(Lippincott), .... Marlton, N. J. 
Mary J. Reber (Brallier), Lykens, Pa. 
Sallie Rhoads (Castner), . Gwynedd, Pa. 
Hannah J. Southard 

(Pierce), Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 

Lizzie E. Tustin (Weaver), Chicago, 111 

1867. 

Gwenny R. Evans 

(Mirick), Philadelphia. 

Emilie H. Malcom 

(Lowry), Denver, Col. 

Mattie E. McKee 

(Criswell), Rosemont. 

Emma M. Minch 

(Clement), Philadelphia. 

1868. 

Sarah A. Reed, .... Philadelphia. 
Mary E. Rhoads, .... Gwynedd. 
Bertha Scott (Shivers), . Haddonfield,N. J. 
*Maris A. Shaaber, . . . 1883. 
Sallie R. Shivers (Murray), Haddonfield, N. J. 
*Lizzie V. Turner 

(Nordell), 1887. 

Mary I. Winans, .... Xenia, Ohio. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



hi 



1869. 



Emma J. Billmeyer 

(Matlack), Lewisburg. 

Sarah Bowen, Clarksburg, W. Va. 

*Lettie M. Davis (Marsh), 1878. 

Amanda Derr, Lewisburg. 

Helen A. Ely (Hopping), Hightstown, Pa. 
Anna J. Higgins, .... Flemington, N. J. 
H. Gertrude Kern ( Smith), Pittston. 
Mattie C. Parker (Taylor), Barrington, N. Y. 
Ettie M. Peckham(Hicks), Brooklyn, N. Y. 



M. Louise Plummer 

(English), Colfax, Wash. 

Matilda Reyman (Loomis),Weems, Va. 
Kate S. Scott (Law), . . Philadelphia. 
Clara L. Smith (Lee), . . Meriden, Conn. 
M. Alice Vanvalzah 

(Bowman), Kansas City, Kan. 

Grace Elizabeth Wales, . Kenoza Lake, N. Y. 
Martha M. Warren (Fish), Pittsburg. 



187O. 



Lizzie F. Baker (Weand), Reading. 

Lottie S. Buch, Bangor. 

*S. Emily Garrard, . . . 1870. 
Lucy W.Hamilton (Moon), City Point, Fla. 
Emily Hancock (Hughes), Lutherville, Md. 
*Mary E. Hendershot 

(W T estcott). 
^Nannie I. Hoskinson. 



M. Addie Keeler (Luch- 

singer), Pittston. 

*Fannie Mathias, .... 1886. 

Annie R. McDonald, . . Lewisburg. 

Frank A. Rooke (Young- 
man), Lock Haven. 

Lizzie Wliittaker, .... Reading. 

*Mary Zellers. 



Laura Boughner, .... Clarksburg, W. Va. 

Annie B. Cooper (Huber), Coopersburg. 

Clara A. Crawford, . . Montoursville. 

*Ida M. Davis. 

Belle C. Leas (McCarthy), Auburn, N. Y. 

*Emma M. Moir (Kite), 1885. 

Anna E. Moore (Davis), Port Jervis, N. Y. 

Lottie E. Phillips (Han- 

num), Atglen. 

Lizzie Bell (Christy), . . Sabbath Rest. 
Jerusha B. Campbell (Up- 

degraff), Williamsport. 

Sarah W. Fowler (Pome- 

roy), Shenandoah. 

Jennie R. Gerould (Ballen- 

tine), Reidsburg. 

Abigail D. Grier (Gries- 

mer), Haddonfield, N. J. 

Hannah Hallowell (Yer- 

kes), Philadelphia. 



187I. 

Emma Sharp (Foster), . Roseville, N. J. 

Mattie E. Sharp (Good- 
man), Atglen. 

*Erama B. Sterner (Field- 

ing), 1883. 

Emma Taylor (Zelley), Burlington, N. J. 

Lizzie M. Wyatt (Frost), Towanda. 



1872. 

Emma Kaufman (Grater), Norristown. 
Sarah C. Krigbaum, . . . Scranton. 
Harriett S. Lippincott 

(Frazer), Emporia, Kansas. 

*Elizabeth M. Miller, . . 1882. 
Emmareene Moore 

(Hare), Port Jervis, N. J. 

Annie F. Slifer (Walls), . Lewisburg. 
Sarah M. Stifler. 

Mary S. Toner (Caldwell) Newberry. 
Anna H. Wilson (Lodge), Media. 



I 12 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



1873- 



"^Josephine Abraham 

(Taylor), U 

Ella P. Hallowell (Sage- 
beer), Conshohocken. 

Harriet R. Harris (Bower), Lewisburg. 

*Eva S. Hart (Groff). 

*Emily A. Kremer (Ham- 
mer) . 

Julia E. Leas (Speer), . . Denver, Col. 



*Anna A. Liddell (Hill), 1880. 

*Hannah M. Montgomery, 1886. 

Emma G. Morgan. 

Mary H. Moss (Treudley), Youngstown, O. 

Ettie P. Mott (Cook), . Denver, Col. 

*Emily L. Rowland 
(Evans). 

Anna K. YVingard (Gra- 
ham), ....... Coatesville. 



1874. 

M. Helen Banger, . . Williamsport. Abigail Overholt (Smith), Cleveland, O. 

Lizzie J. Curtis (Coray), . Uniondale. Caroline J. Phillips (Boyd), Atglen. 

Mary C. Evans (Griffiths), Shenandoah, Iowa. Ella L. Schofield (Marr), Marlboro, Md. 

Mary E. Fowler (Bower), Tamaqua. Agnes M. Stidfole, . . . Tamaqua. 

Alice James (Chambers), West Chester. Anna M. Voris'(Emerick), Milton. 

Anna McNeal, Chattanooga, Tenn. Maggie M. Warder 

M. Susan Morris, .... Philadelphia. (Lewis), Philadelphia. 

*Maria Overholt, . . . 1892. 

1875. 

Sallie Aurand (Ritter), . Lewisburg. Kate E.Ledward(Dolun), Chester. 

Laura G. Brass (Riddell), Williamsport. Annie M. Lindale 

Julia Carter, Henderson, Md. (Cooper), Camden, Del. 

Ella R. Crevelin (Ger- Fannie McGalliard, . . . Bridgeton, N. J. 

hart), Danville. *Kate Reppert (Diffen- 

Mary E. Du Shane, . . . Connellsville. baugh). 

Emma B. Eeg, .... Lewisburg. Emma M. Scott (Mc- 

Annie B. Heath (Young), Wilmington, Del. Dowell), Cincinnati, O. 

Eulalie T. Kennedy, . . Mt. Joy. H. Mary Tustin, . . Bloomsburg. 

Carrie A. Kenyon, . . . Olyphant. Lizzie B. Voris (Follmer), Milton. 

Flora C. Kremer (Calla- Lizzie S. Warder (Crozer), Upland. 

ghan), Angora. 

1876. 

Ella Beale, Pelham Manor, L. I. K. Louise Hope, .... Trenton, N. J. 

Nellie M. Cummings, . . Sunbury. Jennie Loomis (Tyler), . Bennington, N. 7 

Florence Dean (Walter), Scranton. Sallie Mathias (Keeler), . Hilltown. 

Jesse Difienderfer (Mc- Anna Sechler, Montgomery. 

Clelland), Duluth, Minn. Mae Smith (Goodman), . Lewisburg. 

Flora E. Dorey (Wil- Emily J. Thornton 

liams), Scranton. (Heiser), Lewisburg. 

Anna Evans, Lewisburg. Nina M.Van Dyke (Hall), New York City. 

Ida Frick, Lewisburg. * Lizzie Vastine, .... 1879. 

Fannie Harvey (Swartz), Philadelphia. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



ii3 



1877. 

Jennie E. Arthur, .... Bryn Mawr. Anna M. Ledward, . . . Chester. 

Clara A. Beck, Centre Square. Emma A. Liggett, . . . Ickesburg. 

M. Alice Brown (Fry), . Lewisburg. Margaret McNeal, . . . Chattanooga, Tenn. 

May Gerhart (Perry), . . Hightstown,N. J. ^Charlotte Merrill, . . .1880. 
Charlotte E. Kelly, . . . Bloomsburg. 

1878. 

Sarah B. Barber, .... Greeley, Col. Ella C. Irving (Mowry), . Chester. 

Emma Beaver, Hartleton. Kate M. Kaufman, . . . White Deer. 

Kate M. Best (Atkins), . Lock Haven. M. Jennie McNair (Sco- 

Mary Burr, Northumberland. field), Selma, Ala. 

* Annie A. Deise (Newell), 1892. Carrie Reese, Pittsburg. 

A. Margaret Focht (Mc- S. Claribel Smith (Den- 

Clure), Lewisburg. man), Melrose, N. Y. 

Mary S. Hammond (Nor- Helen M. Van Dyke 

ris), . Boonton, N. J. (Eldredge), Philadelphia. 

Myra L. Horton (Schoel- Dora E. Watrous (Spratt), Philadelphia. 

koppf ), Buffalo, N. Y. 

1879. 

Christine B. Beyers Emma A Griffin(Bethune). 

(Vorse), Lewisburg. Eleanor M. Lawshe, . . Lewisburg. 

Emma J.Brown (Condon), Wilcox. Mary A. McLaughlin, . .Lewisburg. 

M.Lydia Bucher(Fruche), Easton. Florence M. Osterhout 

Margaret L. Clingan, . . Lewisburg. (Overholt), Scottdale. 

Clara A. Emerick (Hun- Elm a E. Ruff, California. 

ter), Lewisburg. Mary C.Ward (Van Voast), Schenectady, N. Y. 

1880. 

Eudora G. Blair (Vanval- Jennie C. Overholt 

zah), Lewisburg. (Miles), Scottdale. 

Elizabeth R. Frear * Annie P. Pavey, . . . 1892. 

(Mason), Wilkes-Barre. Ellen W. Russell (Ham- 
Elizabeth K. Gerhart blin), Lewisburg. 

(Faries), Wissahickon H'ghts. Mary E. Williams 

Ella S. Grant (Powell), . Ridgway. (Burhoe), Bassein, Burma. 

Lizzie E. Kenyon (Jones), Olyphant. 

1 88l. 

Laura M. Bower (Hun- Lizzie H. Huston (Mus- 

sicker), Chestnut Hill. ser), Aaronsburg. 

Mary J. Frear (Fry), . . Wilkes-Barre. Ella Musser (A. J. Irey), Warren. 
Carrie G.Loomis (Owens), Jeffersonville, O. 



114 



Memorials of Bucknell University 



1882. 



Ida I. Davidson 

(Weaver), Philadelphia. 

Annie M. Dingier (Groff), Jersey Shore. 
Fannie A. Evans, . . . Philadelphia. 



Dora Hall (Hall), . . . Erie. 
Evalina McRae, .... Birmingham, Ala. 
Edna M. Sears (Dunning), Scranton. 
Laura K. Snyder, .... Warren. 



1883. 



Laura Baker (Everett), . 

Bertha Bell, 

Jeanette Davis, 

Catherine Dill, 

*Cora A. Howe, . . . . 
Anna M. Kieffer, . . . . 
Annie Lowry (Lowry), . 
Jennie M. McLaughlin 
(Follmer), 



Lillian Beale, 

Marian E. Bingamen, . . 
Annie E. Buckingham 

(Spruance), 

* Annie K. Du Shane, . . 
Margaret Evans (McCal- 

man), • 

Clara M. Griffin, . . . . 
Elizabeth E. Griffin, . . 
Sallie I. Gundy, .... 
Grace C. Hull (Peck), . 
Margaret Kane (Petitte), 



Vicksburg. 

Sabbath Rest. 

Lewisburg. 

Philadelphia. 

1887. 

Allentown. 

Scranton. 

Allenwood. 



Philadelphia. 
Pittsburg. 

Germantown. 
1887. 

New Bedford, Mass. 
Asbury Park, N. J. 
North East. 
Lutherville, Md. 
Olyphant. 
London. England. 



Letitia Matthews, . . . New Britain. 
Helena Pavey (Peters), . Allentown. 
Alice Scott (Clemens), . Doylestown. 
Angelette Tilden (Couls- 

ton), Washington C. H, O. 

Margaret P. Tustin 

(O'Harra), Philadelphia. 

Ruth Tustin, Philadelphia. 

Florence A. Van Dyke, . Lewisburg. 



1884. 



Luella Liddell (Frank- 
lin), •. . . 

Clara H. Myers (Good- 
child), 

Charlotte E. Pavey 
(Knight), 

Carrie M. Purdy, .... 

Mary A. Reading, . . . 

Grace T. Runyan (Strine), 

Chella Scott (Beale), . . 

Elizabeth Weaver, . . . 

Annie F. Williams, . . . 



Charlotte, N. C. 

New York City. 

Allentown. 

Pueblo, Mexico. 

New York City. 

Philadelphia. 

Scranton. 

Williamsport. 

Philadelphia. 



1885, 



Alice R. Allen, .... Rolla, Mo. 
Julia H. Atkins (Faw), . Atlanta, Ga. 
Emma R. Baker, .... Allegheny City. 
Marian A. Brown 

(Hyatt), Lewisburg. 



Eleanor S. Cornelius 
(Sagebeer), . . . 
*Laura K. Gerhart, . . 
Annie E. Gundy, . . . . 
Winifred Merriman (Bat- 



Flemington, N. J. 

1887. 

Lewisburg. 



Laura R. Church, 



Washington, D. C. 



ten), Morristown, N. J. 



1886. 



Annie V. Beaver (Weaver), Williamsport. 
Minnie C. Crandell (Derr), Cleveland, Ohio. 
Jeanie Deans (Keiser), . Tacony. 
Annie B. Evans (Coe), . Wood Island, Alaska. 
*Eva Hutchinson (Laird), 1891. 



May S. Jones, Hightstown, 

Florence M. Showers, . . Lewisburg. 
Mary L. Thomas 

(Gerhart), Lewisburg. 

Lilla M. Woodward, . . McKeesport. 



N.J. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



ii5 



Ida Susan Hammond, . . Dover, Del. 

Maud Hanna, Philadelphia. 

Anne Edna Nyce Kaler 

(Dreisbach), Lewisburg. 

Mary Bernetta Sober 

(Grove), Lewisburg. 



1887. 



^Harriet Elizabeth Spratt 

(Hulley), 1892. 

Mary Adelaide Stoner 

(Gretzinger), .... Lewisburg. 

Nannie Jane Wilson 

(Stephens), Lewisburg. 



^Elizabeth Clingan, . . . 1890. 
Jennie R. Clingan (Price), Galesburg, 111. 
Mary Alice Custer, . . . Moore's. 
Margaret A. Davies, . . Scranton. 
Althea Metella Davis 

(Stevenson), Brooklyn, N. 1 

Priscilla M. Duncan, . . Duncannon. 
Katherine M. Follmer 

(Noll), Bellefonte. 



1888. 

Clara Jane Fairchild, . . Montandon. 
Emma Jane Geary, . . . Ridgway. 
Maggie M. Hower (Stein), Lewisburg. 
Jessie Maria Jones, . . . Philadelphia. 
Jennie C. Katherman 

(Cross), Atlantic City, N. J. 

Mary E. Kinports, . . Grant. 
Susanna M. Loudon 

(Cohill), Williamsport. 



1889. 



Jennie Davidson, .... Williamsport. 
Carrie V. Lovell, .... Huntingdon. 
Alice J. Hassenplug 

(Palms), Philadelphia. 

Alice G. Bush, ..... Coudersport. 
Ella C. Church, .... Lewisburg. 
Wilhelmina M. Darling- 
ton, Lewisburg. 

Erne M. Hull, Olyphant. 

Edith K. Hull, . . . . Olyphant. 
Nellie J. Irwin (Randies), West Hebron, N. Y. 
Carrie V. Lloyd, .... Phcenixville. 
Lois W. Lyman, .... Coudersport. 



Maud Schurtz (Scholl), 
Margaret W. Van Wyck, 



189O. 



Williamsport. 
Hopewell Junction, 

N. Y. 



Lewisburg. 
Morristown, Tenn. 
Bloomsburg. 
Benvenue. 



Mary K. Murphy, . . 
Alice C. Nesbit (Moser), 
Edith M. Reber, . . . 
Harriet Richter, . . . 

Elsie G. Roth, Allentown. 

Annie E. Sellers, .... Altoona. 
BerthaB. Wagner (Parker), Philadelphia 
Katherine L. Wolfe, . . Lewisburg. 



189I 



Annie M. Austin, . . . Elmira, N. Y. 
Mary L. Bartol, .... Lewisburg. 
Emma T. Hyman (Samp- 
sell), Winfield. 

Anna L. Kerstetter, . . . Lewisburg. 
Mary M. Kramer, . . . Rebersburg. 
Bessie H. Mershon, . . . Lawrenceville, N. J. 
Perie M. Miller Altoona. 



Maze A. Pellman, . 
Mary R. Rogers, . . 
Blanche A. Schreiner 
Mabel Schreiner, . . 
Bertha M. Shirley, . 
Carrie K. Wittenmeyer, 
Mary Moore Wolfe, 



Hartleton. 

Danville. 

Phcenixville. 

London, England. 

Moores. 

Middleburg. 

Lewisburg. 



u6 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



1892. 



Katherine P. Baker, . . Lewisburg. 
Mary C. Davis (Thomas), Johnstown. 
Katherine I. Engelbert, . Lykens. 
Nellie G. Haines 

(Townsend), .... Winfield. 
Nelle V. Jauss (Nestor), . Wilkes-Barre. 



Margaret S. Baker, . . . Lewisburg. 
Mary E. Butler, . ... Montandon. 
Flora M. Clymer, . . . Philadelphia 
Lillie C. Grove, .... Chillisquaque. 
Margaret B. Katherman, . Lewisburg. 

Louise Lane, Huntingdon. 

Ruth E. Miller, .... Waverly. 



Elizabeth T. Bates, . 
Mary Bell, .... 
Mabelle C. Callender, 
Vida S. Davenport, . 
Eva C. Davison, . . 
Nora M. Greene, . . 
Ida G. Greene, . . 
Cora M. Johnson, 
Harriet I. Lewis, . . 



. Lewisburg. 
. Sabbath Rest. 
. Olyphant. 
. Pittston. 
. Union Corner. 
. Lewistown. 
. Lewistown. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Lewisburg. 



Frances M. Baker, . . . Lewisburg. 
Mary H. Baker, .... Lewisburg. 
Elizabeth E. Brubaker, . Mifflinburg. 

Jennie Davis, Camden, N. J. 

Irene C. Ellis, Jersey Shore. 

Laura Fague, Hughesville. 

Bessie V. Freas, .... Scranton. 
Augusta J. Hanna, . . . Lock Haven. 
Emma B. Hayes, . . . Lewisburg. 



Sara C. Johnson, .... Lumberton, N. C. 
Fannie B. Montgomery, . Newport News, N.C. 
Clara J. Noetling, . . . Mifflinburg. 

Mary A. Peck, Scranton. 

Martha M. Thomson, . . Philadelphia. 
Bertha M. Wittenmyer, . Middleburg. 



1893. 



Anna M. Pensyl, . 
Ruth H. Sprague, 
Nellie Z. Vandling, 
Lottie Walters, 
Hattie Walters, . 
Oriana Williams, . 



Elysburg. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Northumberland. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Blakely. 



[894. 



Alice J. Lillibridge, . , . Olyphant. 
Alice G. Probasco, . . . Bridgeton. 

Ella M. Reese, Fair View Village. 

Anna G. Sieber, .... Gettysburg. 
Emma V. Starick (Fretz), Beverly, N. J. 
Lulu B. Swengel, . . . Lewisburg. 
Mabel W. Thomas, . . . Lewisburg. 
Elizabeth B. Vastine, . . Riverside. 
Mabel E. Wittenmyer, . Middleburg. 



1895. 

Stella R. Houghton, 
Mary Matlack, . . 
Edith E. Schaffer, 
Grace Slifer, . . . 
Alice Snowden, . 
Florence V Stoner, 
Mary A. Thornton, 
Mary E. Wilson, . 



. Lewisburg. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Derry Church. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Hughesville. 
. Sunbury. 
. Lewisburg 
. Lewisburcr. 



Ifnstructors in tbe Unstitute* 

1895*96, 



John Howard Harris, Ph. D., LL. D., 

President of the University, and Instructor in Psychology and Ethics. 

Mrs. Katherine B. Larison, A. M., Principal, 

and Instructor in Literature. 

Elysee Aviragnet, A. M., Mus. Doc, 

Vocal and Instrumental Music and the Romance Languages. 

Candace Wood, 

Drawing and Painting. 

Harriet Clare Armitage, 

English, Elocution, and Gymnastics. 

Juliet Aiken, 

Instrumental Music. 

Elizabeth Collins Eddelman, Sc. B., 

Latin and German. 

Minnie Gould, 

Vocal Music. 



117 



n8 Memorials of Bucknell University. 

Iona Morgan, 

Assistant in Music. 

Eliza Bell, Ph. B., 

History and English. 

Jessie June Wheeler, A. B., 

Mathematics. 

Albert Burns Stewart, A. M., 

Mathematics. 

George Elmer Fisher, Ph. B., 

Science. 

Llewellyn Phillips, A. M., 

Greek. 

William Christian Gretzinger, Ph. B., 

Registrar of the University. 

Charles R. Case, 

Care of Institute Grounds and Buildings. 

Mrs. Charles R. Case, 

Matron. 



Stubents in tbe Unstttute. 



Emma B. Hayes, 



Belle Bartol, . . 
Miriam A. Bucher, . 
Fannie M. Case, . . 
Gertrude E. Church 
Esther McK. Greene, 
Gertrude E. Kase, . 
Emma E. Kunkle, 
Rachel J. Noll, . . 



Mabel E. Batten, . 
Elbina L. Bender, 
Sarah M. Black, . 
Ruth N. Davis, . 
Anna C. Judd, . . 
Mary A. Kline, . 
Emma J. Lawshe, 
Emma Madden, . 
Eliza J. Martin, 



GRADUATE STUDENTS. 

Lewisburg. Mary A, Thornton, 



THE SENIOR CLASS. 



Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Union City. 

Lewistown. 

Danville. 

Newberry. 

Lewisburg. 



Margaret I. Norton, 
Elizabeth J. Noyes, . 
Margaret O. Ro=s, . 
Clarissa F. Russell, 
Emma D. Seiler, . 
Bertha C. Watkins, 
Mary O. Williamson, 



THE FOURTH YEAR CLASS. 



Auburn, N. J. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Winfield. 

Lewisburg. 

Saltillo. 

Lewisburg. 



Viola H. Pensyl, . 
Emma C. Probasco, 
Margaret M. Raike, 
Gertrude W. Roos, 
Lula E. Sanders, 
Edna S. Shires, 
Susan R. Slifer, 
Jessie T. Steiner 
Mabel Wells, . 



THE THIRD YEAR CLASS. 



Minetta M. Anderson 
Laura L. Angle, . . 
Catharine R. Bovver, 
Alice H. Focht, . . 
Maria M. Goddard, . 
Lydia A. W. Hackenbur 
Edith A. Hartley, . . 
Eudora B. Hassenplug, 



. Lewisburg. 
. Strafford. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Philadelphia. 
I, Northumberland. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Lewisburgf. 



Nellie E. Hower, . . . 
Katherine M. Johnson, 
Louise W. Lawshe, 
Grace C. Moses, . 
Hannah V. Noyes, 
Edith L. Phillips, 
Margaret M. Wagner 
Eliza S. Wendle. 



Lewis bum. 



Lewisburg. 

Westport. 

Mifflinburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Scranton. 

Salladasburg. 



Elysburg. 

Bridge ton, N. J. 

Doylestown. 

Lewisburg. 

Milton. 

Limestoneville. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Wilcox. 



Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Westport. 

Plymouth. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburc 



II 9 



120 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



THE SECOND YEAR CLASS 



Jessie M. Birbeck, 
Margaret Campbell, 
Marion A. Crary, 
Alice F. Dunham, 
Nellie L. Earle, . 
Elizabeth Evans, . 
Annabel Hanna, . 



Freeland. 

McKeesport. 

Sheffield. 

Sheffield. 

Lewisburg. 

Freeland. 

Lewisburg. 



Mirian E. Hanna, 
Martha D. Jones, . . 
Sarah E. Judd, . . . 
Elizabeth Kremer, . 
Alberta P. Stapleton, 
Marian M. Wingert, 
Martha Wolfe. . . . 



Lewisburg. 

Lost Creek. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 



THE FIRST YEAR CLASS. 

Margaret B. Groff, Lewisburg 



Edith M. Bastress, 
Laura L. Beidler, 
Kate S. Davis, . . 
Mabel Farley, . . 
Carrie V. Folmer, 
Gertrude Grant, . 
Annie J. Jones, 
Susan Jones, . . . 
Marie L. Leiser, . 
Mabel S. Lovegrove 
Laura E. Manett, . 
Mary E. McClure, 
Gertrude E. Morgan 
Minnie C. Morris, . 



PURSUING SELECT STUDIES. 



Sunbury. 

Doylestovvn. 

Milton. 

Milton. 

Shenandoah. 

Ridgway. 

Plymouth. 

Mahanoy Plane. 

Lewisburg. 

Philadelphia. 

Wilcox. 

McKeesport. 

West Pittston. 

Philadelphia. 



Marguerite O'Donnell, 
Ada E. Pennypacker, 
Eleanor Potter, . . . 
Jennie L. Reading, . 
Elizabeth P. Rossiter, 
Edna K. Russ, . . 
Alice K. Schaeffer, . 
Olive E. Smith, . . 
Elizabeth C. Walker, 
Lena Wiegand, . . 
Margaret E. Wensel, 
Mary G. Youngman, 
Alicia Zierden. . . . 



. Texarkana, Ark. 

. Norristown. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Williamsport 

. Pottstown. 

. Hollidaysburg. 

. Fleetwood. 

. Sunbury. 

. Elkland. 

. Williamsport. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Elkland. 

. Johnsonburg. 



CLASS IN ART. 

Nellie Bastress, .... Sunbury. Albert Le Vino, .... New York City. 

Belle Case, Lewisburg. Mary Noetling, .... Selinsgrove. 

Wilhelmina Darlington, . Lewisburg. Marguerite O'Donnell, . Texarkana, Ark. 

Vida S. Davenport, . . . West Pittston. Margaret O. Ross, . . . Mifflinburg. 

Mrs. Thomas A. Edwards, Lewisburg. Alice K. Schaeffer, . . . Fleetwood. 

Annie Evans, Lewisburg. Rey Stoughton, .... Lewisburg. 

Elizabeth Evans, .... Freeland. Grace E. Wales Kenoza Lake, N. Y. 

Reese Harris, Lewisburg. Mabel Wells, Wilcox. 

Katherine Hazlewoood, Lewisburg. 

Total in the Institute, 108. 




Charles Sexton James, Ph. D. 

Professor of Mathematics, 1851-1877. 



Instructors of tbe School of flfcusic 



1888. E. Aviragnet, A. M., Director. 

1888-89. Hattie I. Foster. 

1890-91. Margaret Wells. 

1 89 1, Juliet Aiken. 

1891-92. Mary Kremer. 

1893-94. Mary B. Morgan. 

1894. Minnie Gould. 

1894. Iona Morgan. 



12 



(Srabuates of tbe School of flfousic. 



1888. 

Virginia Anspach, . Mifflinburg. 

Annie Eaton, Mifflinburg. 

Estelle Kinport, Grant. 

Esther Pannebaker, Lewistown. 

1889. 

Alice Bush, Panama, N. Y. 

* Elizabeth Clingan, . 1889. 

Minnie Kurtz, Mifflinburg. 

May Showers, Lewisburg. 

Allison White, Clintondale. 

189O. 
Alice Lyman, . . Coudersport. 

1 89I. 

Maud Bowen, Lewisburg. 

Carrie Mensch, Mifflinburg. 

1892. 

Margaret Baker, Lewisburg. 

Eliza Beckner, . „ Lewisburg. 

Blanche Swengel, Lewisburg. 

Julia Weidensaul, Lewisburg. 

1893. 

Mary B. Harris, Lewisburg. 

Mame Reed, Sunbury. 

Mary Thornton, Lewisburg. 

Mabel Wittenmyer, Middleburg. 

124 






_ 5u&l/ U >lJi l 



Rev. Francis Wayland Tustin, Ph. D. 

Professor of Science, 1859-1874. Professor of Greek, 1874-18S7. 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 
1894. 

Emma Faust, Watsontown. 

Alice Mensch, ... Mifflinburg. 

Effie Shaeffer, Fleetwood. 

Harriet Sayre, Williamsport. 

Nellie Suiter, Lock Haven. 

1895. 

Ella Bender, Lewisburg. 

Neta Mover, Lewisburg. 

Myrtle Smith, Driftwood. 

Minnie Visick Mt. Carmel. 



125 




Stubents in tbe School of flfousic. 



1895*96. 



ELYSEE AVIRAGNET, A. M., Mus. Doc, 

Director. 

Miss Juliet Aiken, Miss Iona Morgan, Miss Minnie Gould, 

Instructors. 



Ipupils in piano. 



Laura L. Beidler, 
Elbina L. Bender, 
Fanny Billmeyer, . 
Frances Bloom, . 
Lena Burke, . . . 
Emma B. Cook, . 
Marion A. Crary, . 
Alice F. Dunham, 
Arie Dunkelburger, 
Mabel Farley, . . 
Carrie V. Folmer, 
Gertrude Grant, . 
Jennie Himmelreich 
Susan Jones, . . . 
Anna J. Jones, . . 
Caroline E. Kelly, 
Emma J. Lawshe, 
Marie L. Leiser, . 
Mabel S. Lovegrove 
Laura E. Manett, 
Louis Marcus, . . 
Mary E. McClure, 
Oliver P. Miller, . 
Fannie Montgomery 
126 



Doylestown. 

Lewisburg. 

Pottsgrove. 

Sunbury. 

Northumberland. 

Lewisburg. 

Sheffield. 

Sheffield. 

Lewisburg. 

Milton. 

Shenandoah. 

Ridgway. 

Lewisburg. 

Mahanoy Plane. 

Plymouth. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Philadelphia. 

Wilcox. 

Lewisburg. 

McKeesport. 

Lochiel. 

Pottsgrove. 



Gertrude E. Morgan, 
Annie Noaker, . . 
Marguerite O'Donnell, 
Mrs. Willard Oldt. 
Nettie Parkhurst, . 
Ada E. Pennypacker, 
Viola H. Pensyl, . 
Eleanor Potter, . . 
Anna M. Rogers, . 
Elizabeth P. Rossiter, 
Edna K. Russ, . . 
Louise Seiler, . . 
Alice K. Schaeffer, 
Anna E. Smith, . 
Olivia J. Silvers, . 
Jessie T. Steiner, . 
Annie Strohecker, 
Margaret A. Thomas 
Mary Voris, . . , 
Albert Vorse, . , 
Elizabeth C. Walker 
Lizzie Waters, . . 
Bertha C. Watkins, 
John G. Wood, 



. West Pittston. 

. Milton. 

. Texarkana, Ark. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Kane. 

. Norristown. 

. Elysburg. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Allentown. 

. Pottstown. 

. Hollidaysburg. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Fleetwood. 

. Millmont. 

. Lambertville, N. J. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Frostburg, Md. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Elkland. 

. East Lewisburg. 

. Scranton. 

. Erie. 



Memorials of Bucknell University 



127 



pupils in pipe ©rgan. 



Elbina L. Bender, . . . Lewisburg. 

Maud Bowen, Lewisburg. 

Harriet M. Catherman, . Swengel. 
Caroline E. Kelly, . . . Lewisburg. 
Ida E. List, ...... Lewisburg. 

Mary N. Moyer, . . , . Lewisburg. 



Nettie Parkhurst, 
Ada E. Pennypacker, 
Carlino Seiler, . . . 
Olivia J. Silvers, . . 
Elizabeth C. Walker, 



Kane. 
Norristown. 
Lewisburg. 
Lambertville, N. J. 
Elkland. 



pupils in Voice Culture. 



Ezra Allen, .... 
Mabel E. Batten, . . 
Willard M. Bunnell, 
Samuel J. Cleeland, 
Annie Dutton, . . . 
Emma Faust, . . . 
Esther McK. Green, 
Frank Hollinshead, 
Edna Howell, . . . 
Susan Jones, . . , . 
Emma E. Kunkle, . 
Charles F. Kulp, . . 



Coudersport. 

Auburn, N. J. 

Montrose. 

Philadelphia. 

Lewisburg. 

Watsontown. 

Lewistown. 

Philadelphia. 

Northumberland. 

Mahanoy Plane. 

Newberry. 

Philadelphia. 



Mabel S. Lovegrove, 
Laura E. Manett, 
Charles P. Meeker, . 
Gertrude E. Morgan, 
Annie Noaker, . . 
Marguerite O'Donnell, 
Eleanor Potter, . . 
Clarissa F. Russell, . 
Henry E. Stabler, . 
Annie Strohecker, . 
Mary Voris, .... 
Julia Wiedensaul, 



Philadelphia. 

Wilcox. 

Nicetown. 

West Pittston. 

Milton. 

Texarkana, Ark. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Warrensville. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 



pupils in 1barmon£. 



Laura L. Biedler, 
Frances Bloom, 
Maud Bowen, . 
Carrie V. Folmer, 
Susan Jones, . . 
Annie J. Jones, 
Caroline E. Kelly 
Laura E. Manett, 
Oliver P. Miller, 
Gertrude E. Morgan, 



Doylestown. 

Sunbury. 

Lewisburg. 

Shenandoah. 

Mahanoy Plane. 

Plymouth. 

Lewisburg. 

Wilcox. 

Lochiel. 

West Pittston. 



Mrs. C. Willard Oldt, 
Nettie Parkhurst, 
Ada E. Pennypacker, 
Eleanor Potter, . . 
Elizabeth P. Rossiter, 
Alice K. Schaeffer, . 
Olivia J. Silvers, . . 
Jessie T. Steiner, . . 
Elizabeth C. Walker, 
Lizzie Waters, . . . 



Lewisburg. 

Kane. 

Norristown. 

Lewisburg. 

Pottstown. 

Fleetwood. 

Lambertville, N. J. 

Lewisburg. 

Elkland. 

East Lewisburs. 



pupils in IDiolin. 



William Bartol, 
Lena Burke, . . 
Arthur M. Devall, 
Spencer Harris, 
Sarah E. Judd, 
Louise W. Lawshe, 
Laura E. Manett, 
Oliver P. Miller, 



Lewisburg. 

Northumberland. 

Wharton. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Wilcox. 

Lochiel, 



Edwin L. Nesbit, . 
Annie Noaker, . 
Eleanor Potter, . . 
Alice K. Schaeffer, 
Edna S. Shires, . 
Albert Vorse, . . 
Bertha C. Watkins, 



Lewisburg. 

Milton. 

Lewisburg. 

Fleetwood. 

Limestoneville. 

Lewisburg. 

Scranton, 



128 



Memorials of Bucknell University. 



pupil in Wiola. 

Nellie Taylor, Factoryville. 



James B. Martin, 



pupils in Violoncello. 

Lewisburg. Ray Wendell, 



Lewisburg. 



Ezra Allen, 



pupils in 2>ouble JBass. 

Coudersport. Vida S. Davenport, 



Pittston. 



Mabel E. Batten, . . 
Fannie M. Case, » . 



pupils in <3uitar. 

Auburn, N. J. Martha D. Jones, 

Lewisburg. . Olivia J. Silvers, 



Lost Creek. 
Lambertville, N. J. 



Susan Jones, .. . , . 
Louise W. Lawshe, . 
Flora A. SigeJ, . . . 



pupils in rtfcanooltn. 



Elsie Owens, 



. Mahanoy Plane. 
. Lewisburg. 
. Watsontown. 



Elizabeth C. Walker, 
Bertha C. Watkins, . 



pupils in Cornet. 

Lewisburg. Carlino Seiler, 



Elkland. 
Scranton. 



Lewisburg. 



pupils in jflute, Clarinet, ;©ano ffnstruments. 



Ezra Allen, . . . 
Enos C. Baker, . . 
Bryant E. Bower, . 
Robert N. Brady, . 
Willard M. Bunnell, 
Carlton C. Comfort, 
Thomas E. Cooper, 
Charles G. Davis, 
Arthur M. Devall, 
Arthur N. De Vore, 
Luther Donachy, . 
Harold Donachy, 



Coudersport. 

Ercildoun. 

Lewisburg. 

Union City. 

Montrose. 

Bristol. 

Union City. 

Sunbury. 

Wharton. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Lewisburg. 

Total (omitting 



Foster C. Fisher, . , . 
Herbert F. Harris, . . 
Charles S. Keene, . . 
Charles A. Lindemann, 
James D. Macnab, . . 
James B. Martin, . . . 
Edwin R. Powell, . . 
George S. Tilley, . . . 
Richard W. Wagner, . 
Lewis C. Wilkinshaw, . 
Amos T. Williams, . . 

names repeated), 113 



. Salem. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Cramer Hill, N.J. 

. Philadelphia. 

. Brooklyn, N. Y. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Ellwood City. 

. Bridgeton, N. J. 

. Lewisburg. 

. Greensburg. 

. Ridgway. 



MAY 23 1908 



